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We take a look a the Torque app for Android and a OBD2 bluetooth adapter that is required for the full functionality of the app.
A new Microsoft app called Torque, released for Google's Android Wear watches, eliminates the need for users to say "OK, Google" to ask a question.
In an interesting twist, Microsoft brings Torque, its Bing-powered wearable app, to Android smartphones. The app also includes new features.
A couple of months ago, Microsoft released a Bing-powered voice assistant app called Torque, and now the same app—which was previously only for Android Wear devices—can be activated at any ...
That’s what Microsoft Torque delivers. It’s a new app born out of the just launched Microsoft Garage initiative. Garage is the Redmond company’s answer to the old Google labs; a test bed for ...
Microsoft's Wear-only voice search app, Torque, now works on fully-fledged Android devices.
The new Microsoft Torque Search app for Android Wear is a clever concept. It's a voice-search alternative to "OK Google" on your wrist, with a novel twist ...
Microsoft’s Bing Torque Search app lets you search the web, get a weather forecast, calculate math problems, or perform other actions using your voice. Torque launched in October as an app for ...
Well, we're grateful to Microsoft for not making its users yell "OK, Torque" into their smartphones. The company today released an iteration of its voice-recognition search app, Torque, for ...
Positively, this puts Torque in the hands of more users, and provides a second cross-platform option for search, spanning both Android and Android Wear.
Well, we're grateful to Microsoft for not making its users yell "OK, Torque" into their smartphones. The company today released an iteration of its voice-recognition search app, Torque, for ...