For example, in my haste, I tripped up on the word “telecommunications” and raced through “it’ll.” Dragon nailed those two, and other words and phrases like them–punctuation and all–almost every time. I speak reasonably quickly when I dicatate, and Dragon kept up. (No on-off switch or other in-line controls, though.) The NC-181 plugs into your PC’s audio jacks. The wide band helps anchor the headset, and you can position the boom on either the left or right side of your mouth. As bundled adjustable headsets go, I thought that the unit’s comfort level was satisfactory. Nuance includes the Andrea Electronics NC-181 headset microphone (priced at $25) in its package. In addition, Nuance expanded the Dragon Sidebar, a desktop helper screen that sits beside your work, offering an index of commands and tips based on your active window. You can also post updates to Facebook and Twitter using simple commands. This arrangement frees you from having to stay chained to your computer with a headset. This version comes less than a year after the release of Dragon NaturallySpeaking 11 the underlying voice-recognition engine remains unchanged, but this update is replete with a handful of useful interface tweaks, and it adds functionality that iPhone users and social networking hounds will fast appreciate.ĭragon NaturallySpeaking 11.5 Professional ($600 as of Jfree upgrade for existing users of version 11) lets you turn your iPhone or iPod Touch (4th generation), running iOS 4.2 or later, into a dictation microphone. With this software, you can create documents and email messages, navigate the PC, and search the Web, all with your voice. Sometimes it pays to talk to your computer–particularly if you’re running a voice-recognition program such as Nuance Dragon NaturallySpeaking 11.5 Professional.
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