Dragon Dictate 2.5

Dragon Dictate Editor's Review

  1. Dragon Dictate 2.5.2
  2. Dragon Dictate For Windows
  3. Dictation Software For Windows

With Dragon Dictate for Mac 2.5 speech recognition software, you can enter text just by speaking. Control your favourite Mac applications – including Microsoft Word 2011 - using only your voice. With Dragon Dictate you can produce reports, email, articles, books, research notes, online content, and more — quickly, easily, and accurately. Dragon Dictate 2.5 is based on the speech engine from Dragon 11 for windows! So for users who like to use the Windows version instead of the Mac version, it seems like we’re finally on par in terms of recognition accuracy. With Dragon Dictate for Mac 2.5 speech recognition software, you can enter text just by speaking. Control your favourite Mac applications – including Microsoft Word 2011 - using only your voice. With Dragon Dictate you can produce reports, email, articles, books, research notes, online content, and more — quickly, easily, and accurately.

Take control of your Mac with this awesome voice utility.

Dragon

I've been a big supporter of, 'you talk, it types' for over 10 years. I remember using IBM's ViaVoice on my Windows XP powered PC back in 1997. While it was, at times, wonderful to be able to give my arthritic hands a break from the amount of typing I do, its performance issues often prevented the creative process from really flowing the way it should have. Writers write. However, it's not always easy to do when you have to....speak....very...slowly, and very...exactingly. All that's changed now; and thanks to Dragon Dictate for Mac, I've got my MacBook Pro turning cartwheels.
I type between 65-70 words per minute on average. However, I talk about a mile a minute...or at least my grandmother used to say so. With Dragon Dictate for Mac, I can input text just by speaking – up to three times faster than typing – using only my voice. With Dragon Dictate I or any user can produce reports, e-mail, articles, books, research notes, online content, and more with an astonishing level of accuracy. You’ll get more done faster and with less stress and more success. While it does require a bit of vocal training, it takes just minutes; and it has an astounding recognition accuracy rate of up to 99% right out of the box.
If you're a productivity junky, like me, then you're going to love this application. With it, you can control your Mac in a relaxed, hands-free manner without being tied to your keyboard. Instead of using your mouse, you can just speak commands to launch and control applications. You can move the cursor or click anywhere on your screen simply by using your voice. You can tell your Mac what to do, like “Reply To This Message” or “Open Microsoft Word” or “Jump To Google” to work faster and smarter. Create voice commands that automate complex workflows on your Mac.
Pro’s: You talk it types, complete control of your computer

Con’s: System intensive. Requires some heavy hardware to keep your Mac running at an acceptable level of performance
Conclusion: Dragon Dictate for Mac was built to give users the experience they expect from their favorite Mac apps. It provides an intuitive, easy-to-use interface that dramatically boosts your productivity. What’s more, Dragon Dictate for Mac works with your favorite Apple applications, including Mail, iChat, iCal, TextEdit, Pages, and Safari.
You'll need to insure that you have a powerful enough Mac to push this app, however. The biggest issue with this app was system performance and what my Mac was doing with other processor cores and available RAM. You'll also find that you need a specialized microphone in order to get the best performance from the app. Please don't think that you're going to be able to use the microphone that may be built into your Mac and get really great voice to text recognition. It just isn't going to happen. A standard gaming headset should do very well.

As we reported earlier this week, Dragon Dictate has been updated to version 2.5 with some interesting social sharing features as well as a huge bug fix that makes the program a lot more useful.

Earlier this year I reviewed Dragon Dictate 2.0 and found that if you are in desperate need of voice dictation due to things like an injury or a physical limitation, then it can make you productive. Unfortunately the program suffered from a major memory leak that required a restart of the app after about 20 minutes of use.

Later we found a trick on YouTube for clearing memory via a voice command. Thankfully, the update fixed the leak and added the ability to post to Twitter and Facebook. It also allows the use of an iPhone as a remote mic and better integration of voice dictation and simultaneous keyboard and mouse use.

Better Nuance Support

After reading our review the folks at Nuance contacted me and put me in touch with their Mac project team. I learned that MacSpeech was purchased by Nuance and they are still in the process of integrating the Mac version into their product line, other than just changing the name to Dragon Dictate. It seems that 2.0 was still a transitional version. I found evidence of this in the company’s website.

At the time I reviewed the product the site provided little information about Dragon Dictate for Mac. Today, you can find more help and support for the Mac program. With 2.0 I needed more help and found less. The good news for those who really need or just want to use dictation software, with 2.5 you will need less help, but more is available.

Speed and Performance Improvements

With the Dragon Dictate 2.5 update we decided to give it another test run in order to see if the biggest weaknesses we faced were corrected. The memory leak that caused Dragon to gobble up system resources after about 20 minutes are gone. I wrote the majority of this review using Dragon and never experienced a slowdown. The program responds quickly: you can really just talk at your normal pace and it will keep up the majority of the time.

The program crashed while testing a few features, but I discovered that my preferences file was corrupted. Deleting it fixed the problem and it runs smoothly now. If you are running OS X Lion you will have to

  1. Open the Terminal app
  2. Type the following (without quotes) into Terminal or just cut and paste it from here: 'chflags nohidden ~/Library/'
  3. Log off your system by going to the Apple Menu in the upper right corner and choose Log Out ‘User Name’ where User Name is your name
  4. Log in using your password and everything will be restored as it was when you logged out

When you log back into the system, you should now be able to go to your Home folder in Finder and see the Library folder. There are a lot of different folders there that might be useful to see, like the Preferences folder or the folder where Mail stores downloads. The Preferences folder contains all the .plist files that contain preferences for programs. They occasionally get corrupted and a tech support person for a software company might tell you to delete a .plist file, like Nuance did for me when I was having trouble with Dragon Dictate 2.5 for Mac while I was reviewing it.”>unhide the Library folder in your Home folder if you have the same problem. Then you can delete the file. Doing this will not delete your Dragon Dictate profiles, by the way, and you won’t need to retrain the software to recognize your speech.

Open Finder and then navigate to the Home folder where you will now find your Library folder. Look for the Preferences folder and delete the two files that begin with “com.dragon” (without the quotes). Log off and log back in and restart Dragon Dictate. It will behave as if you are launching it for the first time, with the exception of having to retrain it.

It is a pleasure to be able to work in Microsoft Word 2011 for Mac without the program slowing down so much that it becomes useless. If that was the only improvement in 2.5, I would now be willing to recommend the program. But stability isn’t the update’s only new trick.

You Talk It Types, but So Can You

In version 2.0 and earlier, Dragon would get confused when you dictated in Word 2011 for Mac if you tried to also use the keyboard to make edits. For example, if you dictated a sentence and then realized you misspelled a word, you would confuse dragon if you selected the word and then tried to dictate. It works now. The mouse and keyboard are integrated with the voice recognition. Previously, if you dictated a sentence and then edited it with the keyboard and entered a period at the end of a sentence using the keyboard, Dragon didn’t know you ended the sentence. The next thing you dictated would’t be capitalized. Now it does.

Your iPhone Can Type for You

An iOS device like an iPhone can be used as a wireless microphone, thanks to the update and the Dragon iOS app. The following paragraph was dictated using an iPhone 4 with the Dragon Remote Microphone app.

In order to test this feature out I added a new profile using my son’s iPhone and dictated this paragraph. As you can see it seems to be working very well. In fact other than user error it has recognized everything perfectly and accurately.

While talking to the people at Nuance, I learned that some people are using this new feature with their iPads. They use the iPad to log into a desktop system at work through a VPN. Because the iPad has a microphone they can dictate through it to the software from a remote location.

The app runs natively on the iPhone or iPod touch. It works on the iPad in 2X mode. I was told that an Android app is on the way.

Dragon Dictate 2.5 Gets Social

Version 2.5 can update your Facebook or Twitter accounts using the command “post to…”. Unfortunately setting up the feature crashed Dragon Dictate 2.5 a couple of times. As I said above, I learned from speaking to the folks at Nuance that my preferences file was corrupted. Once I fixed that this feature worked well. Just say, “Post to Twitter” and a Twitter box opens up like the one you see to the right. Dictate your Tweet and say, “Press Tweet” and it will send the message.

This worked well, but it does take a few seconds for the app to send the Tweet so be patient.

Numbers Only

The new numbers mode recognizes everything it hears as numbers. For example if I say, “Two thousand four hundred sixty-seven,” it should type it as, “2416.” In my short test it worked fairly well, as shown by this sentence alone. It is not perfect, however. I dictated a series of numbers and it got most of the numbers right, but sometimes did not add spaces between them. For example, I said, “Twelve sixteen three,” and it recognized it as, “12163” instead of “12 16 3” as I wanted.

Speak clearly with definite pauses between the numbers and it will recognize them accurately. People who spend a lot of time in spreadsheets will like this new feature.

The Other Stuff

Dragon Dictate 2.5

A few of the other improvements include:

  • faster profile training
  • better vocabulary editing
  • better formatting
  • microphone auto sleep which automatically turns off your microphone after determined amount of time

Our Recommendation

While my previous recommendation was that only those who desperately needed speech dictation bother with Dragon Dictate 2.0, I can now say that version 2.5 is ready for just about everyone.

There is a bit of a learning curve for using speech recognition software. It is not as simple as just talking like the characters on Star Trek. You have to speak your punctuation in order for it to turn out correctly. It is a good idea to learn the commands in Dragon Dictate 2.5.

Dragon

Thanks to the better integration of the previous owners help information on the Nuance website, you’re more likely to get good training. In fact there is a helpful PDF file which will get you up to speed in using the software.Also, while learning the program it is a good idea to keep the Available Commands window open–see image to the right.

Dragon Dictate 2.5.2

Dragon

Dragon Dictate For Windows

I wish Dragon Dictate 2.5 was out when I had my injury earlier this year and needed speech recognition software desperately. Now that I don’t need it I actually choose to use the software. Even for a fast typist like me, speaking is still faster once you know what you’re doing.

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