Baruch,

You said:

> I'm investigating the feasibility of using voice to
> text software as a hedge against tendonitis and other 
> work-related maladies. Does anyone have experience 
> using such software with Frame?

I know a couple of people who've done permanent damage to their arms. It's 
tragic because such injuries are preventable.

One coworker's diagnosis was "repetitive strain injury" to her arms:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Repetitive_stress_syndrome

She was told to stop typing, which makes it difficult to be a technical writer. 
She got approval to purchase the most advanced version of Dragon software and 
had to get an office to use it (because she had to talk all the time). She used 
it with FrameMaker and benefited from her prior knowledge of the application to 
navigate the UI.

Dragon benefited from a large amount of late 90s investment and is still 
considered the best voice recognition application for general PC use. There was 
a steep learning curve for my coworker and for the Dragon application. Dragon 
saves your voice profile and continues to improve over time. You must remember 
to back those files up or you would have to retrain Dragon after a hard drive 
crash. 

Using Dragon was frustrating for her. She ended up focusing more on editing and 
developing documentation plans than developing content. Dragon enabled her to 
enter text, navigate the UI, but it was not as fast as typing, using keyboard 
shortcuts, etc. 

Dragon software could be a useful tool to help limit your time at the keyboard, 
but you should consider it along with a wholistic approach to identifying the 
cause of and managing your symptoms. You should consider a set of ergonomic 
options, such as your chair, your desk, a foot stool, a keyboard tray, tablet 
and pen entry, an ergonomic keyboard, mouse, trackball, or touchpad.

Microsoft's Healthy Computing guide is a good introduction to the subject:

http://www.microsoft.com/hardware/hcg/hcg_view.mspx

In particular, it focuses on how to make sure that your arms are in the 
appropriate position.

If your body is in pain, you should take a break and figure it all out before 
you cause a permanent injury. Carpal tunnel injuries are particularly prone to 
snowballing:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carpal_tunnel

I use a stylus and tablet part of the time, but I mostly use a trackball with 
programmable buttons and the touch pad on my ergonomic keyboard (by Adesso). I 
also rely on keyboard shortcuts. It helps me to work faster.

If your arm pain continues, you should get a medical opinion. 

Best wishes,

--Jared

Date: Mon, 9 Feb 2009 15:07:26 +0200
From: "Baruch Brodersen" <[email protected]>
Subject: OT :: Frame & Voice to Text software
To: <framers at lists.frameusers.com>

A slightly OT request. I'm investigating the feasibility of using voice to
text software as a hedge against tendonitis and other work-related maladies.
Does anyone have experience using such software with Frame?


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