I wish I had a wireless headset to give me fits. Ya ever fall asleep and wake 
up to 5 pages of snoring? ;)
Hope you have luck with them. 
john



----- Original Message ----
From: Quadius <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: Steve Oldaker <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Cc: Joan Anglin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [email protected]
Sent: Thursday, July 24, 2008 10:03:38 PM
Subject: Re: [QUAD-L] does anyone use Dragon with Vista and if so what version


Thanks so much for the information.  Like you I have been using Dragon since 
version 3.0 and I'm currently using Dragon 9.0 with Windows XP.  I just can't 
see upgrading to version 9.5 unless I have Vista and a new computer.
I am curious to know if anyone on here has tried Apple's voice-activated 
software.  Let me know if you have.
Thanks again.
Quadius
PS for some reason my wireless Plantronics microphone is giving me fits tonight 
and it's taking me forever to dictate.


On 7/22/08, Steve Oldaker <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: 
Dana,
 
I have to concur with Joan. I have been a Dragon NaturallySpeaking user since 
Ver. 3 and currently use Ver. 9 on my Windows XP computers, but the Speech 
Recognition application that comes free with Windows Vista is shockingly good. 
It's easy to use and learn, especially for those who have experience with voice 
recognition software like Dragon NaturallySpeaking, since the commands are 
similar if not identical in many cases.
 
Vista Speech Recognition learns and adapts to your voice while you go through 
the interactive tutorials to learn how to use the software, which only takes 
about 20 minutes. Immediately after completing the tutorial, I opened MS Word 
using voice commands and dictated 4 paragraphs of text and punctuation. It did 
not make a single misrecognition.
 
It works with all Microsoft software and the most other software, allowing you 
to navigate menus, Windows controls, etc., all hands free.
 
Vista Speech Recognition is memory intensive, so I do recommend having at least 
2GB of RAM to use it effectively, especially if you do much multitasking. I 
also recommend using a decent quality, noise canceling microphone, which can be 
purchased for $20-$30. I also make these same recommendations for using Dragon 
NaturallySpeaking.
 
I would at least try Vista Speech Recognition before investing money in any 
version of Dragon NaturallySpeaking.
 
Regards,
 
Steve
 
From:Joan Anglin [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Tuesday, July 22, 2008 3:04 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [email protected]
Subject: RE: [QUAD-L] does anyone use Dragon with Vista and if so what version
 
Dana
I tried dragon 9 with Vista, and decided that I like Vista speech recognition 
better. I did not want to spend the money buying dragon 9.5. I would be 
interested in seeing a comparison between the two. As I've stated before, I 
really like Vista, maybe I've become too complacent? It definitely self trains 
itself as I dictate, and after using a new word several times it figured out 
how I want that spelled and corrects itself.
Joan
 
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