I am looking to start using dictation on my Mac. I know it has built in dictation but was looking for "pro" software. I see Nuance has stopped updating its Dragon software. What should I use instead, ...
Dragon has been around conceptually since 1975 and was incorporated into systems going all the way back to DOS. Still, it didn’t really start to shine until 1997 with the release of NaturallySpeaking ...
Macworld has done an interesting comparison of two different dictation offerings available on your Mac: They've looked at the core dictation service available in the latest version of OS X, Mountain ...
Using our voice to control computers has never really taken off. For many of us, using voice recognition technology wasn’t even a consideration until features like dictation and Siri arrived on our ...
New dictation software hits the market this week that, for the first time, allows users to dictate directly to a computer right out of the box. Previous versions of Dragon NaturallySpeaking required ...
Voice dictation company Nuance today announced a collection of new software upgrades, including Dragon Professional Individual (version 15), Dragon Legal Individual (version 15), and Dragon ...
There’ve been some dictation apps before now, but now Nuance, makers of Dragon, the world’s most popular desktop dictation software, is invading the App Store with their own. Plus, it’s free (for a ...
It's all about speech on the iPhone 4S, from the systemwide dictation features to the inscrutable but very helpful Siri assistant. The fine folks at Nuance (suppliers of some of the underlying IP that ...
Can't afford a stenographer? Well now iPhone has an App for that. Nuance, the creators of the successful Dragon Naturally Speaking dictation software have expanded into mobile service. Dragon ...
If you tend to think faster than you can type, have mobility issues that make it hard to use a mouse and keyboard, or just want to live in the future with hands-free computing, the Dragon ...
The on-screen keyboard for the iPhone certainly has its share of fans, but there’s also a noticeable chunk of the population that, at best, has learned to tolerate on-screen keys and, at worst, can ...