28 July, 2017 In this day and age of digital technology disruption it only makes sense to see the major tech giants look towards voice recognition to start to replace that clunky, push button, major taker of space on your laptop. Your keyboard. The thing we hammer daily and have done since its invention back in 1868, yes 1868, 149 years ago when Christopher Latham Sholes patented the QWERTY typewriter that we commonly use today. Long overdue for some kind of digital disruption as you can see.
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Go to a document or other text field and place the insertion point where you want your dictated text to appear. Press the keyboard shortcut for starting dictation, or choose Edit > Start Dictation. The default shortcut is Fn Fn (press the Fn key twice).
What is voice recognition? Simply speaking, your spoken voice is automatically converted to text, as you speak. There are now a number of solutions that can do this, they range in features and cost but on the whole accuracy is high, speed is fast and cost varies from free to moderately expensive. In this post we are going to look at the major tech giants offerings as well as the stalwart of the voice recognition world a company called Nuance who make a product you may have heard of called Dragon. Nuance have been developing speech recognition software since 1997 with their first release of NaturallySpeaking for Windows. Dragon is now available from Nuance for both Windows and Mac.
Dictation in OS X can be enabled in the System Settings. For offline use you will need to enable Enhanced Dictation: Microsoft Dictate (Garage Project) - Microsoft Office Add-in • Windows only (Windows 8 and above) • Free - $0 • Requires Office 2013 or Office 2016 (including Office 365 install) • Real time voice to text in Microsoft Word, Outlook and PowerPoint • Will convert spoken voice to foreign language (e.g. Speak English and Microsoft Dictate will transcribe in French, very cool) • Automated punctuation, no need to say 'comma', 'full stop' etc • Can not convert recorded speech to text, real time spoken voice only.
Nuance (formerly known as NaturallySpeaking) and (formerly known as MacSpeech Dictate) • Windows & Mac versions available • From AU$300 upwards depending on version • Can convert from recorded voice • Advanced learning. Dragon builds a profile of the way you speak and learns over time. • Is widely used in the legal and medical professions to convert voice-to-text • The goto solution for businesses Ok so yes we have shown you the free versions from the big hitters but the old faithful when it comes to voice recognition is Dragon from Nuance. It has been around for years, it just gets better and better with every release and is packed full of features and functions to justify its cost over the other options listed here. But, we do want to highlight that Apple, Google and now Microsoft all have a vested interest in voice recognition.
Dragons days may be numbered but for now it remains the pick of the bunch for day to day voice recognition. LATEST POSTS • Sending Digital Dictation From Your Olympus DS-9500 - You Have Three Options Remember the old days when you had to return to your desk to dock your dictaphone to be able to send your audio dictation files to your transcription typist? Well, times have changed.
Olympus are embracing new technologies and building. • Olympus Dictation App - Error - Enable The Microphone To Perform Recording We recently pickup up a shiny new iPhone XR for app testing and of course the first app we dropped onto our new device was the Olympus Dictation App version 1.2.1 but this is what we were met with: We ran. • Latest Olympus DS-9500 Firmware Update - v1.11 Olympus have issued another firmware upgrade (v1.11) to the high end DS-9500 professional dictaphone.