![]() With Dragon getting better and better and now with the latest versions starting to gather some traction in the legal/medical/journalism fields the timing is right for Olympus to step up and use their incredible audio savvy in these hand held, USB connected, state of the art microphones for dictation and voice recognition. Olympus RecMic II RM-4010P (RRP AU$399).Olympus RecMic II RM-4100S (RRP AU$349).Olympus RecMic II RM-4110S (RRP AU$449).There are three new RecMic II models in the range: Please note, at the time of writing this the RecMic Series II is not compatible with ODMS R6.4.0 Dictation Module for Windows or DSS Player Plus v7 for Mac. Olympus Australia (and worldwide) have just released a new range of USB connected, hand held microphones for voice recognition using Dragon. Enables voice to text anywhere you would normally type (e.g.Large list of supported languages including the following English accents: Australian, UK, US and Canada.No internet connection required (with Enhanced Dictation enabled, just download a local language dictionary file).Can not convert recorded speech to text, real time spoken voice only.Extensive range of voice commands - Google Voice Typing Setup & Voice Commands.No software to install, works via your Chrome web browser.Extensive list of supported languages including the following English accents: Australian, UK, US, Canada, India, Ireland, New Zealand, Phillipines and South Africa.Only works with Google Docs and Google Slides.Dragon is now available from Nuance for both Windows and Mac. Nuance have been developing speech recognition software since 1997 with their first release of NaturallySpeaking for Windows. In this post we are going to look at the major tech giants offerings as well as the stalwart of the voice recognition world a company called Nuance who make a product you may have heard of called Dragon. There are now a number of solutions that can do this, they range in features and cost but on the whole accuracy is high, speed is fast and cost varies from free to moderately expensive. What is voice recognition? Simply speaking, your spoken voice is automatically converted to text, as you speak. Long overdue for some kind of digital disruption as you can see. The thing we hammer daily and have done since its invention back in 1868, yes 1868, 149 years ago when Christopher Latham Sholes patented the QWERTY typewriter that we commonly use today. In this day and age of digital technology disruption it only makes sense to see the major tech giants look towards voice recognition to start to replace that clunky, push button, major taker of space on your laptop. We offer a service for clients worldwide to convert recorded voice to text, click the image below for more details: **UPDATE 2019** AWS, Amazon Web Services, throw their hat in the ring for automatic speech-to-text with their AWS Transcribe service.
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