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Dragon NaturallySpeaking 10 Preferred

Dragon NaturallySpeaking 10 isn't perfect, but it's the best dictation software available. We don't find this upgrade necessary for the most basic dictation, although new features may benefit heavily-accented English speakers and those who rely heavily on voice commands.

Who wants to risk or aggravate carpal tunnel syndrome at a keyboard? People who suffer repetitive stress injuries, type slowly, or dictate long documents for work are among the best candidates for Dragon NaturallySpeaking 10, which types as you talk. While not perfect, it's the best consumer tool available for digital dictation and can save time and headaches for the right user.

Dragon NaturallySpeaking's maker, Nuance, estimates that built-in speech-to-text capabilities in Windows Vista are about five years behind those of this application. You could get by with such features in Windows for occasional use, but Dragon is deeper and more accurate.

Version 10 is supposed to be 20 per cent more accurate than its predecessor, both of which supposedly offer greater than 99 per cent accuracy. However, that won't likely translate to your personal experience. We found success with about four out of five spoken words. Should we blame our lisping, soft-spoken ways, the software, or the hardware?

The updates to Dragon 10 include support for people with accented English, as well as voice-command shortcuts for supported applications and Web searches. Dragon NaturallySpeaking is supposed to translate spoken words to text twice as quickly as version 9. We couldn't measure that, but did notice a speed improvement.

Set-up and interface
Dragon NaturallySpeaking 10 runs only on Windows XP or 2000 SP4 or higher or on Vista, so Mac users are out of luck. (ViaVoice for the Mac, which uses Nuance's technology, is no longer updated.) It requires 512MB of RAM and 1GB of free hard-drive space. You'll also need a noise-cancelling headset microphone, a 16-bit or equivalent sound card, and a DVD drive.

If you only need a tool to type as you talk and don't want to dictate commands to software or for Web searches, then opt for the $149.95 Standard edition of Dragon NaturallySpeaking. Preferred, for $299.95, includes software voice commands as well as support for mobile devices. Preferred Mobile adds a digital voice recorder.

We tested the $999.95 Dragon NaturallySpeaking Professional 10, which adds support for forms, networking capabilities for an office, and the choice of a standard or Bluetooth headset. We wish a USB headset were an option; you'll have to buy a dongle to hook up the mic-in headset to a USB slot. The $1,590 Legal edition also helps you dictate briefs and court documents.

Make sure to uninstall an earlier version of Dragon if you have one. And if you already have the latest version on a PC, don't overwrite it with a lesser-featured version that may be bundled with a new, supported digital voice recorder.

Installing Dragon 10 on two Windows XP machines took around 20 minutes without incident. Unfortunately, Windows Vista installation was a nightmare. It took more than 10 minutes to install Visual C++ 8.0 Runtime, only to find out it hadn't fully installed. Or had it? We were caught in a catch-22 of circular commands after rebooting more than a dozen times. The issue was related to a known bug in Windows Vista. We spent what amounted to more than two hours with a polite, bright tech support representative who offered a workaround.

Once it's running, Dragon NaturallySpeaking 10 adds a small feature bar that sits atop other open applications on your desktop. The well-organised pull-down menus haven't changed from the past. The text will "type" pretty much wherever a cursor appears, including word processing pages, Web form fields, and the included DragonPad.

Dragon performs a microphone check during set-up. When our volume was too low on the Windows Vista laptop, we couldn't use the software. Somehow reading our frustrated mind, it typed "I hate you I" when we said, "Type. Type!" Saying "crazy" got spelled out as "greasy". Then "greasy", spoken, translated to "leafy", then "greens fee", then "Greenstein". In fact, the included headset didn't deliver adequate voice quality to use Dragon NaturallySpeaking at all. We reverted to the same headset packaged with Dragon 9, with better results.

Training is optional, but we recommend stepping through its paces to get Dragon up to speed with your speech patterns. The software can also scan the documents and emails on your computer to look for commonly used words.

Features
New to this update is support for accents which include, oddly enough, Teen English alongside American, Australian, Southern Asian, British, Dutch, French, German, Italian, and Spanish accents. And there's improved QuickVoice formatting. For instance, now you can utter the command, "Underline The Grapes of Wrath" to underline the book's title, which took two steps with previous versions.

In addition, Dragon NaturallySpeaking 10 introduces Voice Shortcuts that enable you to look things up online quickly in your default browser. Tell Dragon to "search YouTube for Martin Luther King's 'I Have a Dream Speech'", and relevant results appear on YouTube. The same applies for Wikipedia, eBay, and Amazon. Dragon 10 is also built to search within Windows Vista folders and in Google Desktop.

This application supports commands in Microsoft Word, Corel WordPerfect, Microsoft Outlook Express, Internet Explorer, and AOL. Using Dragon with the Google Docs online word processor was trickier in our tests than with Microsoft Word 2003 or 2007. People with disabilities can mostly drop the mouse and the keyboard, asking Dragon to do the work for them. But if you have the choice, we still prefer manual controls to the tedious attempts at using Dragon to cut and paste chunks of text within a long document.

The more you use Dragon, correcting its errors and adding your own lingo to its vocabulary, the better it gets. It already recognises everything from "a cappella" to "smiley-face" to "ZZ Top". Abbreviations and tech slang work, too; speaking "dot ASP" spells ".ASP" and saying "smiley-face" will spell out this character: :-) Dragon NaturallySpeaking 10 has the intelligence to detect words within context. For example, it knows to type "eating a carrot" instead of "eating a karat".

You don't need to speak like a robot into the mic, although enunciating helps. If you tend to mumble, then act as if you're reading a book to a child or a teleprompter for a newscast when using Dragon. Out of the box, the application does very well with long, polysyllabic words. But we've found it difficult for Dragon versions 8, 9, and 10 to distinguish between short words with similar vowel sounds, such as "a", "the", and "of".

You can plug in a variety of voice recorders for Dragon NaturallySpeaking 10 to transcribe your own voice. The application supports MP3, WAV, and WMA audio files. You can create a profile of your voice for a mobile recording device, such as a Pocket PC handheld. After you record your thoughts on the go, you can feed Dragon that sound file later for transcription.

Unfortunately, the Dragon 10 licence is only good for one user. To the woe of journalists and college students, Dragon won't transcribe your recording of, say, an interview subject or a college professor.

Support
Step-by-step set-up help and tutorials are excellent. We found the searchable online knowledge-base to be well organised. Peer support is also available online.

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Talkback 11 comments

    I have been receiving promos t ...Tom Hadley -- 27/08/08

    I have been receiving promos to upgrade this product for over 3 weeks. I decided to buy it on the 14th August, gave them my visa and an order for 3-8 days delivery. !2 days later they tell me the "anticipated" shipping date is 31 August !!

    The good: I will tell you when I finally get the product

    The bad: I will tell you when I finally get the product

    I once wanted support from Nua ...Andrew -- 02/09/08

    I once wanted support from Nuance. After choosing from a drop-down list on their website what version of the software I was using and paying ten US dollars, I was told via email that they would only support the latest version!!! I sent two emails complaining, to which they never replied. Mob of bastards.

    Excellent product and now very ...voice guy -- 02/09/08

    Excellent product and now very very accurate when used with an approved microphone. Got mine from www.voicerecognition.com.au in 1 day. They have good USB mics too.

    The good: Accurate. Lot os features and good tutorial.

    The bad: Need a high quality mic. The included one is VERY POOR. I got the NC181USB and its extremely accurate and not to expensive

    In two installations Dragon 10 ...Jerrold Cohen -- 09/09/08

    In two installations Dragon 10 Preferred knocked out the usefulness of my Kensington trackball mouse, turning it into a standard 2-button mouse, it made my USB keyboard nonfunctional, I had to use a PS/2 keyboard, and it chewed up system files. I got a hal.dll missing or corrupt error message at bootup, and had to use my Win XP system CD to restore files. During installation there was a window for registration and I couldn't control the window. The menu items wouldn't respond. It froze. I had to somehow get rid of the window with ctrl-alt-delete or esc, don't remember. The entire installation was a nightmare and I never got it to work. I have 28 years home computer experience and can safely say this is the worst piece of software I TRIED to install in my computer.

    The good: None whatever.

    The bad: It knocked me out of operation until I could restore my files from my system CD, it destroyed my Dragon 8 files, which gave my very good dictation, not perfect. And I never got it to work. Thank heavens I had backups for everything. I needed them after Dragon 10 installation got through messing with my system. I consider myself to be fairly expert, not quite programmer material, but I know my way around a computer.

    Sorry dude but obviously you d ...voicedude -- 09/09/08

    Sorry dude but obviously you don't know what you are doing. Dragon changing your mouse? I don't think so. I had a minor issue when i got it from www.voicerecognition.com.au and they answered the phone straight away and solved it. That why i buy from them and not online discounters.

    The good: Great accuracy easy setup.

    The bad: Need a quality usb microphone like the NC181USB http://www.voicerecognition.com.au/nc181vm_usb_microphone.htm

    I have a brand new notebook wi ...Simon -- 28/11/08

    I have a brand new notebook with XP installed.
    The installation of this product is an absolute nightmare even for someone with reasonable tech experience with pc programming .
    This prodcut is far overpriced for its poor installation from its cd.
    Error messages are repettitive and if it does not install on a newly installed version of xp what sort of program is it and at what cost?
    It should be sold as shareware at around $10.00, because plenty could do batter at designing this.

    The good: good once working

    The bad: takes hours to install needs tech help to install on the simplest verions of xp costs more than it should for poor second grade installation

    Wow just got the software voic ...bill o'malley -- 14/02/09

    Wow just got the software voicerecognition.com.au the official australian retailer with a NC181USB mic. It works straight way with minimal training. Im fing all my emails and forum posting with Dragon 10. Easy to use. Make sure you buy from an offical retailer like voicerecognition.com.au as there dodgey versions about!

    The good: Easy to to use and get set up. Very accurate. Faster than typing!

    The bad: You need to pay extra to get the highest accuracy microphone. The NC181USB is the cheapest option. voicerecognition.comau has them in stock.

    Hey, guy spamming this website ...chad chadson -- 20/02/09

    Hey, guy spamming this website, http://www.voicerecognition.com.au. You should have just commented once man! Just 1 subtle comment suggesting that the accuracy is improved with a usb mic or whatever from your site would have been genius, you over did it big time. That is all.

    The good: awesome

    The bad: sometimes not so awesome

    Great Product with a USB micro ...rojer -- 27/04/09

    Great Product with a USB microphone like the NC181USB from voicerecognition.com.au got my box in 24hours after I ordered online!

    The good: Accurate and fun to use. Brilliant when you need to type a lot!

    The bad: Have to wear a good headset on head

    When using the Standard editio ...Peedee -- 19/05/09

    When using the Standard edition, the voice recognition (if I am using the microphone) is OK. However, in this Standard edition, I cannot determine if there is a way to have NaturallySpeaking hear an audio/voice file from my recorder (used to dictate memos) and transcribe this file into text. The packaging and company web site are far from clear on this.

    The good: Acceptable voice recogniton when used directly with the microphone

    The bad: Any way that audio files created on a voice recorder (and even transferred to my computer) can be recognized by this Standard edition?

    Dragon Naturally Speaking 10 Anonymous -- 08/09/09

    I got my dragon Naturally speaking 10 in under 24 hoursdirect from the aussie distributor www.voicerecognitionhttp://www.voicerecognition.com.au/dragon_naturally_speaking.htm

    However, I chose the USB NC181 microphone option and its epically more accurate than the low quality included analogue microphone.

    Im a happy Dragon 10 user now. Works on my windows 7 64bit machine great!

Add your opinion

Overview

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The good:
  • Lets you skip dictation setup
  • Features a slimmer toolbar
  • Allows voice command to browse Web pages
  • Lets you drop the mouse and keyboard while typing
  • Handy transcription tools
  • Support for PDAs and Bluetooth headsets
The bad:
  • Costly
  • Requires a robust computer
  • Windows only
  • Takes time to learn the voice commands and other features
The bottomline:

For people who type a lot or suffer sore fingers and hands, Dragon NaturallySpeaking 9 is the best tool available for dictating text and commanding a Web browser by voice, despite the gradual adjustments needed to conform to your personal manner of speaking.

Editors’ rating:

8/10

RRP: AU$400.00

Related topics:

dragon, dictation, naturallyspeaking, 10, voice recognition

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