Speech Recognition

Although it may surprise many people, the Mac is quite talented when it comes to speech. Its abilities fall into two categories: reading text aloud using a synthesized voice; and taking commands from your voice.

The Apple marketing machine may have been working too hard when it called this feature “speech recognition”—Mac OS X doesn’t take dictation, typing out what you say. (For that, you need a program like Dragon Dictate, www.nuance.com.)

Instead, Mac OS X’s speech recognition feature is what’s known as a command-and-control technology. It lets you open programs, trigger AppleScripts, choose menu commands, trigger keystrokes, and click dialog box buttons and tabs—just by speaking their names.

Few people use speech recognition. But if your Mac has a microphone, it’s worth at least a 15-minute test drive. It may become a part of your work routine forever.

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