About Voice Recognition
Enabling machines to respond to speech is the holy grail of the computer age. Truly "user-friendly" computers, whether the ones we work on all day or those that get built into our cars, should do our bidding at the sound of our voices almost instinctively.
Programs that convert speech to text require that first the computer must convert the analog sound waves of speech into the digital signals of computer processing. Then the software must compare the digital signals against the program's vocabulary and figure out from the words nearby, or context, what word to select.
Programs that convert speech to text require that first the computer must convert the analog sound waves of speech into the digital signals of computer processing. Then the software must compare the digital signals against the program's vocabulary and figure out from the words nearby, or context, what word to select.
^ TOPAspect Software
The world's leading company exclusively focused on the contact centre industry. Aspect Customer Self-Service IVR is an advanced, full-featured IVR platform that uses Public Switched Telephone Network (PSTN) and Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) connectivity to deliver voice self-service in new ways.
^ TOPIBM
Embedded ViaVoice Enterprise Edition is IBM's flagship speech recognition and Text-To-Speech product for rooted applications. ViaVoice Enterprise Edition's tools and features allow developers to create powerful and user-friendly applications quickly and efficiently.
^ TOPMicrosoft
Microsoft Office XP comprises advanced speech-recognition functionality in all Office programs, enabling people to enter and edit data, control menus and execute commands by speaking into a microphone.
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