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Ever try Dragon Naturally Speaking? It's not perfect, but it'a probably the best one out there right now. My rheumatologist used it to take office visit notes, and it rarely missed a word.
I'm not easily impressed by software. I was impressed.
However I'm now using a cellphone, in quite a noisy school office, and Xilinhot has become the city where I live, so I tend to use it a lot in messages and things. As well as many other words and names that might not be in the western English voice dictation dictionaries. I found voice recognition works very for automated telephone banking, but that's a very limited vocabulary that a system has to know and recognise, just numbers, letters and a few verbs probably... and I wasn't trying to dictate words like "Xilinhot".![]()


Voice works fine for the most part, however mixing languages and adding slang is going to throw it off.

I find that voice recognition does not work well for uncommon proper nouns. Words like John or Washington work much better because they are fairly common. Your city is something that I would consider to be uncommon. I have a friend whose name is Yee Wing and when I try to say it using voice reco, it thinks I said, "you win."
With regional accents, slang and varying speech patterns I don't know if voice recognition will ever be 100% accurate, but it will improve over time.
How is your voice recognition? I don't think most humans accurately interpret each other 100% of the time, so it's hard to expect a phone/computer to always get it right.
a nother issue i find it how do i do punctuation if i say full stop I get full stop it's the same with comma
Yeah that is a superior functionality that Dragon has - the ability to insert punctuation and even edit using your voice.
It wouldn't always work though for me and became infuriating. When you say 'scratch that' to delete your last phrase block and it just types 'scratch bat' or something of the ilk it sends you spare. You invariably end up reaching for the mouse.
...and those dictated posts were done in a quiet room. Ideal conditions in theory. BTW I'm typing this, not dictating.This is Google I've been dictating to, and it doesn't even capitalise proper nouns, e.g. google....and those dictated posts were done in a quiet room. Ideal conditions in theory. BTW I'm typing this, not dictating.
No I got that. I was just saying (not very clearly) that mobile voice recognition is missing important functionality that exists in desktop equivalents.
Maybe google should implement two modes - TEXT, where you use voice commands for dictation, punctuation and editing; and COMMAND, where you ask google questions, search, etc and submit to its seemingly rather fuzzy interpretation.
This still wouldn't resolve the problem of misinterpreted place names though. Maybe if there were a keyword command to alert google to search another language dictionary for the next word?
English voice reco doesn't work very well for Scottish accents.
Now imagine having a deep heavy voice with a southern drawl to it. If I use the VR with Hangouts and keep it short and simple it works pretty good, but not if it's a long sentence.