![]() In that bar is an orange microphone logo, which indicates that Dragon is currently not listening. Then the application loads a bar at the top of your screen. Upon opening Dragon NaturallySpeaking for the first time, you have to do the usual text dictations to set up a user profile. (You’ll also find a preinstalled version on every iPhone and iPad, and Nuance confirmed earlier this year that the company makes Siri for Apple.) Otherwise, your lowest-cost preview is the $20 Dragon Notes, which lets you test out the voice-recognition capabilities in a stripped-down program.ĭragon NaturallySpeaking steps you through its training. If you have a recent Intel-powered Ultrabook or all-in-one desktop, you might have Dragon Assistant preinstalled. Nor did it respond well to my German accent, so other accents may stymie it as well.Ĭhrome users might have noticed the little microphone at the far right of the search bar in Google. I found the accuracy level dipped when I dictated long texts into a MS Office doc. It’s easy to use, and the price is right, but Windows Speech Recognition’s performance could stand some improvement. When you are finished, just say “stop listening” and it will go to sleep, waiting for you to wake it up again. You can also tell the computer to shut down or restart, as well as call up the start menu or a command line box. Once you have a document open, you can dictate text and it will instantly appear there. It can open browsers (including new tabs), apps, as well as Microsoft Office documents. You can tell Windows Speech Recognition to pretty much do anything on your PC. Thank you dude, I don't mean to sound harsh in my critique as I'm loving the game so far and just trying to lend advice where I see an opportunity.To begin, just say clearly into the microphone “start listening.” The app then beeps and springs into action, waiting for your next command. Keep up the good work my man, I'll be watching for charlie in the trees ) I spent many an hour in Swat 4 with voice control, great fun and so immersive when it's working well. Alone it's great for accessibility for those who can't use a mouse and keyboard so well, and is often overlooked as a feature worth investing any time into but when done well it can really enhance the whole experience. ![]() Thanks for adding in in the first place though. It would be an awesome feature with some adjustment and would really enhance the atmosphere you've created here. Understandably there's some limitations with voice control but it doesn't have to be limited to processing one word at a time, it's pretty unusable as it stands from an immersion point of view. Here's one example of live communications. My Dad was in the Signals back in the day you see, you certainly don't speak slowly with significant pauses, you never know when you might get cut off and time is always of the essence. It's why you have readbacks and confirmations, radio protocol is built with error checking in mind in order to overcome misunderstanding when it matters. You'd think that but the reality is very different. I think that when it comes to military radio communication you would separate the words with significant pauses rather than risk that you won't be understand correctly ) Would be nice to have a few options, "Alpha what's your status, over?" "Alpha How's it going over there?" Voice control is very overlooked these days and it's absolutely perfect for this. ![]() Reckon you'll look into refining the feature somewhat? Postat inițial de Sadist_cain:there's qute a bit of delay with the voice currently, it feels very unnatural. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |