>Actually though I still
>mostly use DragonDictate for dictation. I personally haven't gotten
>comfortable yet with continuous dictation. I also find that naturally
>speaking's correction mode is cumbersome when you have limited typing
>capabilities.
Are you talking about knowing what you want to say and it not
appearing on the screen once you say it? This happens to me
frequently. I know what I want to convey in my head but the words
just don't come out making any sense without lots of document
massaging. This is where DragonDictate has NaturallySpeaking beat.
>I'm probably still going to hold out for Dragon Systems to realize that the
>recognition engine of naturally speaking combined with the command and
>control functionalities of DragonDictate would make an unbeatable product in
>that it would really truly allow total hands free control of your computing
>environment. I'm sure they'll get there. Probably just not quick enough
>for those of us who have been around their products for a while and see the
>potential they have yet to achieve :-).
What I would like to see is a 32 bit version of DragonDictate with its
current discrete speech engine and NaturallySpeaking's continuous
speech engine combined. There are times when discrete speech is
preferable for me. Short notes like email and especially when I'm
tired.
-- george Tracy gttracy@@iname.comThis document was composed with Voice Recognition Software. Incorrectly recognized words or phrases may be present.
![]() |