You heard it here first: IBM ViaVoice wins the speech recognition battle by default, but would have won even if the competition hadn't failed.
Perennial competitors NaturallySpeaking and Voice Xpress are apparently out of the picture. Lernout & Hauspie, the owner of both, has declared bankruptcy, and both software packages face an uncertain future.
Thankfully, ViaVoice Pro 9.0 has what it takes to stand alone: it boasts high (if not perfect) dictation accuracy, works better within Word than Office XP's own speech engine and lets you surf by speaking. The downside? Its AU$330 price tag.
ViaVoice 9.0 is not revolutionary; rather, it barely departs from version 8.0. As with 8.0, all of our test installations went smoothly and typically took just under 30 minutes, including the short training session that involved reading text aloud. Likewise, ViaVoice swills just as much disk space as previous versions, chewing up a whopping 510MB.
There's no change, either, in ViaVoice's interface. The VoiceCenter toolbar, which holds all the program's major commands, occupies a thin strip at the top of the screen and sports just a single button (to turn the microphone on and off) and one menu (to access the program's commands).
You can also shrink VoiceCenter to just a single icon in your system tray, turn it into a cartoon-character "agent" that rests on the screen, or even dock it against an application window (smart if you dictate mostly into Word, for example).
ViaVoice 9.0 works under Windows 98 (Second Edition only), Me, 2000, and XP.
ViaVoice works with the spoken word in three ways. First, it dictates your words into every application that accepts text input; second, it lets you command and control most Windows applications (and the desktop) by speaking commands; and third, it reads text back to you. The first way is the most impressive, the second is the most useful, and the third is the most reliable.
With just a click, you can start dictating in any Windows application. We used ViaVoice to talk to scores of programs, from Outlook Express to Quicken and Excel. All worked well.
Of course, accuracy varied, depending on what we read--a generic memo with short words and little specialised vocabulary turned in the best scores--but, on average, ViaVoice puts down the correct word 92 percent of the time, a substantial five percent improvement over last year. (We give credit to the first-rate Plantronics microphone headset, an AU$70 device bundled with the Pro edition.) Still, be prepared for embarrassing errors. Once, when we said, "Fetch our slippers", ViaVoice wrote "Fetch Christopher's".
ViaVoice comes with its own stripped-down word processor (SpeechPad) for dictation, but the speech software works best with Microsoft Word 2000 and 2002. Within Word, you can dictate and even edit using your voice, with plain-English phrases such as "Delete this paragraph".
Even Office XP's own speech engine can't do this; and ViaVoice 9.0 seems to take dictation faster than the previous version, too. ViaVoice is better than ever at operating your computer and particularly excels at guiding the browser.
Unlike the speech engine bundled with Office XP, ViaVoice navigates the Web--through Internet Explorer, Netscape Navigator, or AOL 6.0--guided by voice commands such as "Back" or "Scroll down", and the first few works of a link. The program rarely stumbles here; occasionally we had to say a link twice.
Want to switch from dictation to program control? If you're in the middle of dictating to, for instance, Word, ViaVoice needs only a short pause to recognise that "File open" means you want to open a file, not stick those words in your document. (Office XP's own speech recognition mode makes you manually switch between dictation and program control by clicking a button on the toolbar.)
Finally, ViaVoice will read, in a robotic voice, any text in any open document or dialogue box. Click the Begin Reading command in VoiceCenter's menu to start this tool, which is a boon to anyone with a visual impairment. Although it sounds a bit stiff, ViaVoice's text-to-speech voice is always understandable, even when it reads names and places. If you already own ViaVoice 8.0, there's no need to upgrade. But if you have version 7.0, you should, if only for ViaVoice 9.0's vastly improved speech surfing.
Among 9.0's new tricks are a key-control feature that lets you toggle the microphone on and off with one key (so your muttering isn't taken for dictation) and four new specialised vocabularies--Computers, Business, Cuisine, and Chatter's Jargon--to complement the program's existing vocabulary. Naturally, we found the Computer vocabulary valuable--ViaVoice renders "megabyte" as "MB." Nice.
ViaVoice's helpful tech support is just a click away. The help file is thorough and the online FAQ is quite detailed. If you can't find an answer in either of those sources, you can e-mail questions or call technical support.
If you need only an occasional built-in typist and you're not wealthy enough to buy ViaVoice, Office XP's engine may suffice. Otherwise, ViaVoice is your best and only choice.
| Product: | IBM ViaVoice Pro USB Edition 9.0 |
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| Price: | AU$328.90 (comes with head-set worth about AU$70) |
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| Vendor: | IBM |
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| Phone: | 13 24 26 |
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| Interoperability: | ![]() ![]() ![]() ViaVoice 9.0 works under Windows 98 (Second Edition only), Me, 2000, and XP. |
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| Futureproofing: | ![]() ![]() ![]() If you already own ViaVoice 8.0 there's no need to upgrade. If you have 7.0 you should. |
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| ROI: | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Best choice for voice recognition software. |
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| Service: | ![]() ![]() ![]() Warranty applies with separate warranty for headset (Telset 1800 653 424). Phone 02 9354 9355 or 131 426, NZ: 04 460 4002. |
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| Rating: | ![]() ![]() 1/2 |
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