![]() ![]() It is super easy to use, and there are a variety of commands that can be used to control the text and write without accessing the keyboard and with stunning accuracy. It's good enough for basic speech recognition purposes and creating documents in Microsoft Word, definitely, and a lot less money. Using the in-built Speech Recognition, Windows dictation easily converts everything you speak into text. Sure it'll take some time to get it done and going back and redoing them once or twice more helps but not everyone will go that far. That would be my recommendation, use the built in WSR and make sure to get a decent headset or desktop microphone and do more training than just the one time setup - in fact training it through all the available training sessions is what I'd recommend. Lamont Wood: Windows Speech Recognition vs Dragon NaturallySpeaking (shootout) ![]() ![]() ![]() Here's an older review from 2014 where someone did a rather limited comparison of Window's speech recognition (WSR) vs Dragon NaturallySpeaking and the results were about as expected, almost even: It started with Windows Vista, then Windows 7 made it much much better, and since I never used Windows 8 or 8.1 all I can do is assume it's in there and also in Windows 10 as well. Unfortunately there doesn't seem to really be any cheap alternatives unless you consider that Windows itself has had some fairly decent speech recognition capabilities for a while now. Nuance Dragon NaturallySpeaking is pretty much the industry standard and has been for a long time now - unfortunately because it's considered to be the market leader the price is (what I'd consider) to be a bit higher than it's worth, starting at around $300 for even the consumer product. ![]()
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