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Best Lotus Notes Conversion Tool. Malwarebytes Anti-Malware. McAfee Labs Stinger. When I use Windows 7 speech recognition to dictate into Word , it is popping the new text into a box that offers to Insert or Cancel rather than typing directly into the text. If I go to the Voice recogniton options and check "Speak text in correction dialog," it will take dictation directly into the line without the Insert box, but will not take commands such as "Delete that. If I check both of those boxes, it still does that same thing.
Seems to be no way to just have it take my dictation directly into the Word document and simultaneously allow me to give it commands. It might be that the computer does not understand the command properly. I would suggest you to train the computer to understand. Check the link mentioned below. Was this reply helpful? Yes No. Sorry this didn't help. Thanks for your feedback.
One long-running criticism of Microsoft's bundled Windows software is that is strives only to be "good enough" without ever achieving excellence. Ars Technica's Editor-in-chief Ken Fisher and I put Win 7's built in recognition engine to the test for a couple of months to find out how well it serves the needs of the hardcore word jockey.
We'll spare you the suspense: serious users will want to look elsewhere, but this is a great way to show any colleague with a Win 7 machine that speech recognition is real, it's here, and it works. Microsoft rolled out a speech recognition engine in Office XP; after installing the suite, users who opted for the speech recognition engine could dictate into Word and other apps.
It wasn't until Windows Vista, though, that speech recognition was baked right into the operating system, and was done so in a competent way. But it's awfully cool Speech Recognition is an unsung bright spot in Windows Vista. With Win 7, Microsoft's speech recognition has come into its own. Starting the program is simple -- the "Speech Recognition" control panel applet allows you to set your microphone and toggle the recognition engine on.
It couldn't be simpler, and there's nothing to install. In moments, you'll be dictating An attractive but severe-looking young woman will guide you through the initial tutorial, which introduces all the basic commands and provides plenty of practice in using basic tools like the corrections features. As tutorials go, this one is excellent, and there's a big reveal partway through -- the tutorial isn't just teaching you, it's adapting to your voice as you work through each section.
When complete, it's time to control Windows using only the sheer power of your voice. Navigation and OS control are the best features of the built-in recognition engine, and they worked almost flawlessly.
Window open. I'm in Explorer. You can say just about any scrap of text visible on the screen, from menus to filenames to dialog box options, and the software correctly clicks, selects, or opens. Opening, switching, and controlling programs was simple, easy enough to figure out without even glancing through the printable speech recognition cheat sheet.
And when you don't know what to say or there's nothing in particular to say -- like when trying to click some icon in Word's ribbon interface -- there's still no need to resort to the mouse. Instead, a simple "Show Numbers" command will overlay the current window with a host of blue rectangles, each placed above a clickable object and each containing a number.
Once the rectangles are displayed, say the number and the computer clicks for you. Even better, the floating voice recognition widget that runs by default when speech recognition is active will even tell you how to do the same thing using an actual voice command.
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