T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1538.1 | move the strain? | UKCSSE::KEANE | | Mon Jul 22 1991 04:08 | 12 |
|
Hi
This appears to be a marvellous piece of equipment, pity it isnt
Digital's!
BTW. Using a voice box saves your arm/wrist, but what about your vocal
cords?, does the heavy use of a voice box strain your voce? 8>)).
Rgds
Pat K.
|
1538.2 | not a problem | SAUTER::SAUTER | John Sauter | Tue Jul 23 1991 17:19 | 8 |
| Heavy use of the voice is not necessary. The person in the office
adjacent to mine recently returned from disability and now uses a
Dragon Dictate system. His microphone is good enough that I can't
hear him talk to his system, any more than I used to be able to hear
the keyclicks on his keyboard.
What's wrong with the system not being Digital's?
John Sauter
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1538.3 | Response to .1 | EPIK::HEILMAN | I wanna be CDAted... | Wed Jul 24 1991 09:47 | 6 |
| > BTW. Using a voice box saves your arm/wrist, but what about your vocal
> cords?, does the heavy use of a voice box strain your voce? 8>)).
My voice is a little tired at the end of the day, but I have not really had
any noticeable problem. When I get tired, however, the accuracy level of the
system does go down.
|
1538.4 | More info on reserving tape from ZKO library | EPIK::HEILMAN | I wanna be CDAted... | Wed Jul 24 1991 09:50 | 10 |
| To reserve tape from ZKO library, you can either call the library at
DTN 381-1057 or send mail to ZEKE::LIBRARY and ask for "Working by Voice With
the DragonDictate(tm) Voice Recognition System" by Hans Heilman (it has been
added to the DLN catalog and the CID # is 76004). The library says you can
contact them directly to reserve it even if you work in another facility.
Hans
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1538.5 | Is it available in Europe | EICMFG::BINGER | | Fri Aug 02 1991 05:46 | 3 |
| Is the tape available in Europe?. This is the PAL secam system.
Rgds,
Stephen
|
1538.6 | | ASICS::LESLIE | Andy Leslie | Fri Aug 02 1991 17:26 | 1 |
| Try your local DEC Library.
|
1538.7 | Announcing DragonDictate notes conference | EPIK::HEILMAN | I wanna be CDAted... | Thu Aug 22 1991 16:20 | 23 |
| I wanted to let everyone know that there is now a notes file for the
DragonDictate voice recognition system on STEREO::DRAGON. The moderator is
Tom Beaudet.
<<< STEREO::SYSA$:[NOTES$LIBRARY]DRAGON.NOTE;1 >>>
-< DragonDictate users conference >-
================================================================================
Note 1.0 Introduction No replies
STEREO::BEAUDET 14 lines 16-AUG-1991 15:15
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Now that Digital has several DragonDictate users and interest seems to
be gaining I thought it was time we had a conference to allow us to
discuss this product.
I'd like to keep this discussion to just DragonDictate and how it's
being used in conjunction with various DEC systems and applications.
The standard DEC VAXnotes conference rules apply here.
This is a non-restricted conference so discussion of topics not for
general consumption should be avoided.
Tom Beaudet (mod)
|
1538.8 | Dyslexia help? | CHEFS::GERRYT | | Fri Apr 26 1996 12:55 | 14 |
| Has anyone thought of using these sort of systems to help dyslexics?
(sp?)
We know of a family with two sons who's IQ's are over 120, but have
severe dyslexia.
There are many adults and children with learning difficulties because
they are dyslexic, and a voice activated, reasonably priced word processing
package on a PC might help considerably.
Has anyone any updated info on this sort of thing?
Thanks,
Tim @REO UK
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1538.9 | partial answers, more questions.. | TEKVAX::KOPEC | we're gonna need another Timmy! | Fri Apr 26 1996 13:42 | 28 |
| In the short term, there are various "screen access" packages that
allow speech-out, and I have read about a lot of speech-in stuff for
Windows etc..
And of course, there is Emacspeak.. that's speech-out only as of now..
There is a fair amount of rumbling about Accessibility in general for
modern operating systems etc, but I don't know when you'll see products..
(at the ACM computer-human interaction conference week, I brought up
the issue of dyslexia in one of the SIGs .. as an example of a common
condition that would benefit from more accessible interfaces)
The basic idea there is to get away from a total infatuation with the
various modes of interaction as a gee-gaw glitzy thing to do, and start
to consider the sum of the modes in a way that (a) enriches the
interface for everybody, and (b) allows a fully-functional interaction
with one or more of the modes unavailable.
I also hear tell that Microsoft is looking at abstracting the Windows
presentation API up a level, so that an application can tell the OS
"this is what I want to do" rather than "put this icon over there, and
this text here" .. this would allow the user to set a preference re
interaction modes and have the OS deal with it independent of the
application. (warning: this is a fairly serious paradigm shift, and I'm
not convinced it'll work..)
...tom
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