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It has great touches - with practice, you can combine computer navigation commands with text dictation, and you can record macros that apply to any application. ViaVoice has excellent recognition accuracy, but voice command and control is as important as accuracy if your aim is to dispense with your keyboard and mouse. One change - the use of TCP/IP for communication between ViaVoice modules - will alert personal firewalls, so watch out. Other changes are mainly of interest to users upgrading from a previous version: the VoiceCentre Taskbar can now be configured, macro problems have been fixed, and you no longer have to use an administrator account on Windows 2000 or XP. Accuracy will be better if you can spare 20 minutes for this training, though, and your input speed can exceed average touchtyping rates. You can jump in and begin dictation immediately training, which helps ViaVoice to recognise your speech patterns, is now optional.
VIAVOICE XP PRO
ViaVoice 10.0 Windows Pro USB edition has a new speech engine giving faster recognition and now accepts input from digital recorders.
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Desktop packages like ViaVoice and market leader Dragon NaturallySpeaking make voice input a viable proposition for anyone seeking relief from bashing keys.
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Speech recognition traditionally appeals to people who have difficulty using keyboards and mice, and in law and medicine where documentation proliferates and dictation is the norm. Speak normally into a microphone and ViaVoice accurately reproduces it, whether you say “two’s company” or “to his company”. ViaVoice doesn’t simply convert spoken word into text, though: it interprets voice patterns and analyses context to reproduce speech accurately. IBM ViaVoice recognises speech and converts it into text or commands, enabling you to sideline the keyboard and mouse for common tasks such as creating documents, composing e-mail and browsing the Web.