91 lines
7.8 KiB
Plaintext
91 lines
7.8 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 1769
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Title: HPR1769: A Demonstration of Dictation Software on my Office Computer
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1769/hpr1769.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 09:03:46
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---
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This is HPR episode 1,769 entitled A Demonstration of Dictation Software on my office computer,
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and in part of the series Accessibility, it is hosted by John Kulp and is about 14 minutes long.
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The summary is, I record a full show in dictation mode to demonstrate dragon dictation software capabilities.
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This episode of HBR is brought to you by an honesthost.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HBR15. That's HBR15.
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Better web hosting that's honest and fair at An Honesthost.com.
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Hey everybody, I thought I should give a quick heads up about the nature of this episode.
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It's pretty weird sounding when you listen to it all by itself. What I'm demonstrating here is
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dictation software, specifically the dragon dictate software program that I use on my office
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computer. It's a Mac mini that I have at work. It sounds weird because I use a lot of
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punctuation with my mouth. One thing I really wish I'd remembered to do, and this demonstrates
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again the difficulty of doing really good dictation. I forgot to do new paragraphs in between different
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thoughts. Well, the transcript is going to look a little bit funny because it's going to be one
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giant paragraph. One other thing I suggest that you do is watch the YouTube video that I'm going
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to link to. It's a screen capture that I made immediately after recording this episode.
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I dumped the wave file over to my Mac mini and ran the transcription tool on dragon dictate
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to transcribe the audio into text. I really think you should watch it. It's pretty impressive.
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It does it at about two or three times the real time that it took to record the episode. It's
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pretty cool to watch and I think you would enjoy it. That's it. I hope you enjoy this demonstration
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of dictation. One more thing. Record a show. Upload it to HPR. We really could use some more shows
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right about now or else you guys are going to get really sick of hearing me post all these shows. Okay,
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that's it. Bye.
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Hi everybody, exclamation point. This is John Culp in Lafayette, comma, Louisiana period.
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I am going to do a rather strange episode today, period. What I'm doing is demonstrating the
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dictation software that I use on the office computer that I have here at work, period.
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If you've listened to my previous episodes, comma, then you have heard me speak of the
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Blather speech recognition program that I use on my Linux desktop, comma. But as you may also
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remember, comma, Blather is not a dictation tool, period. Blather is a tool where you have to set
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up commands that will run other commands, period. In other words, comma, you have to configure
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everything from scratch, period. I do have some capabilities for dictation on my Linux desktop,
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comma, but they involve using the Google Web Speech API and a special dictation box that I have
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set up, comma, and these are not at all good for long form dictation, period. For serious dictation,
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comma, such as writing letters and memos and other long form text, comma, you really need a
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proper dictation tool, period. These are available built into the operating systems of Windows and
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Mac OS 10, comma, but I normally use the dragon, naturally speaking software instead, period.
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I have found that it is more accurate and more powerful than the built-in versions that you can get
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on either Windows or Mac, period. That doesn't mean you shouldn't try out the built-in speech
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recognition on Windows and Mac, comma. You definitely should, comma, because I think you would be very
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impressed with them, period. I know for sure that the version on Windows learns from your voice
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and from the corrections that you make to the text that you have spoken, comma, and eventually
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becomes very powerful in recognizing your speech, period. The biggest problem that I had with the
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Windows speech recognition was that it was a huge memory hog and frequently brought my system to a
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grinding halt, period. This is not good, period. Blather never does that, comma, but then again,
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blather cannot take dictation, period. The latest system that I use for dictation is on a fairly
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recent Mac mini running the nuance dragon dictate software, period. This is a very powerful
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dictation program that learns from your speech patterns and you can also add words to the vocabulary
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so that it will get them right when it hears them, period. This is especially important to do
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if you have frequently used unusual words, comma, such as a name with an alternate spelling
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from what is normally in the program's dictionary, period. One of the great things about
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the Mac dragon dictate program, comma, also, comma is its ability to do transcriptions of audio files,
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period. In fact, the reason I am speaking this way is that I plan to use the transcription of
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this recording as the show notes verbatim without any corrections, period. The difficulty that most
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people have with dictation software at least initially is doing things like punctuation and capitalization
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period. You have to remember to do these things or else your transcript will come out without
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any punctuation or capitalization, comma, unless the words that you are speaking are known proper
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nouns, period. It also capitalizes automatically at the beginning of sentences, comma, so that if you
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use periods frequently, then you will have capitalized words after those periods, period.
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You can see that I am having trouble speaking this text in a fluent way, comma, and this is one of
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the other difficulties that people have when initially using transcription software, period.
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It works best when you can express complete thoughts without pausing, comma, because it learns from
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the context of your words, period. It has algorithms that calculate the possibility of one word or
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another based on the context, comma, and so it is much better to speak entire sentences at one
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than it is to pause while trying to gather your thoughts, period. This is a major difference from
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trying to write at the keyboard, comma, where it does not matter at all if you pause for seconds or
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even minutes while you think of what you want to write next, period. Anyhow, comma, I highly recommend
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using some kind of dictation software if you suffer from repetitive strain injuries like I do,
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period. This will save you many thousands of key strokes, period. Even if it's only using
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the speech recognition that's available on your phones over the web, comma, that's better than
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nothing, period. The disadvantage of any of these services that have to send your recording over
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the web to get a transcription and then send it back into your device is that they will never
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learn your voice and your particular speech patterns, period. In order for that to work best,
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comma, you really have to use a dedicated standalone speech recognition program that resides locally
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on your computer and saves your profile and learns from your speaking, period.
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Well, comma, I guess that is about it for today, comma. I hope you have enjoyed hearing this
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brief lesson on dictation, period. See you next time, exclamation point.
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You've been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio. We are a community podcast
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network that releases shows every weekday Monday through Friday. Today's show, like all our shows,
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was contributed by an HPR listener like yourself. If you ever thought of recording a podcast
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then click on our contributing to find out how easy it really is. Hacker Public Radio was founded
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by the digital dog pound and the infonomicon computer club and it's part of the binary revolution
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at binrev.com. If you have comments on today's show, please email the host directly, leave a comment
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on the website or record a follow-up episode yourself. Unless otherwise status, today's show is
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released on the creative comments, attribution, share a light, 3.0 license.
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