interfacing to Dragon from a Python app

Brad Clements bkc at murkworks.com
Wed Apr 21 18:55:03 EDT 1999


I have used microsoft's iit product. What attracted me was the price..
(Also, I have T3 access)

It DOES work, though you need a good headset for dictation to work well. I
guess that's generally true of everything else anyway..

I'm planning on using it with Python to "read" imap messages to me via
telephone...



Frank Sergeant wrote in message ...
>In article <000801be89dd$d407a0c0$ed9e2299 at tim>,
>"Tim Peters" <tim_one at email.msn.com> wrote:
>
>> FYI, people curious about speech recognition under Windows might want to
>> give Microsoft's implementation a try; see the little-known
>>
>>     http://www.microsoft.com/iit/
>
>Thanks for the pointer.  I browsed around the site for awhile.
>
>> This is not for the Windows-ignorant, weak-hearted, or slow-modem'ed
<wink>,
>
>I couldn't quite bring myself to start the 21MB download.  I'm still
>pondering my approach to the whole Speech Recognition (SR) thing.  I'm
>gradually getting some hardware set up that might support it and
>considering the Dragon Preferred product (around $135 somewhere on
>the net) versus saving up for the Dragon developer's kit.  Third in
>line, I guess, is Microsoft's 21MB download.  Although ...
>
>I'm also thinking of overall priorities -- in that that SR might
>not be able to make a silk purse out of a sow's ear (then again,
>a sow's ear may be better at SR than a silk purse).
>
>
>  -- Frank
>  frank.sergeant at pobox.com
>






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