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Speaking in to a phone to make a text message seems to be one process too many. |
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I quite like this. A bun, as long as it didn't change my intended comment to "You ducking aunt" like my phone does at present. |
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// why not have a speech recognition software built into mobile phones |
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Because general-purpose speech recognition software still isn't good enough to do that reliably. |
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Why implement it as software when you can call someone to dictate it? |
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Could this be implemented for telegrams? |
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//general-purpose speech recognition
software still isn't good enough// Yes, but
it would be OK if, upon receipt, the
message were automatically converted
back to speech by a reciprocal piece of
software. Then "Hi Denise" becomes
texted as "Hide a neice", which is then
spoken as "Hi Denise". |
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Would it translate things into gibberish abbreviations which nobody over the age of 14 understands or write them out correctly with all the grammar and punctuation they deserves? |
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If general-purpose speech recognition software still isn't good enough to do that reliably then I suggest building in a fax machine to a mobile. One can then write a proper message with a pen. |
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//One can then write a proper message with a pen.// |
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Or with a stylus on a touch-screen. |
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//Why implement it as software when you can call someone to dictate it?// |
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You can be sure an SMS will be intelligable. Voicemails often sound garbled and if you are in a nightclub or something you might not be able to hear it anyway. |
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//general-purpose speech recognition software still isn't good enough to do that reliably// |
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It doesn't have to do it reliably. It just has to save a decent amount of finger work. As long as it is quicker to talk and edit than to type everything, this idea is good. |
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