J
John Doe
There is a scripting tool for Dragon NaturallySpeaking DNS called
"Dragonfly". Its intent is to allow voice activated
macroing/scripting in Windows without requiring the legal or
medical version of DNS. But it has the extra innovation of
allowing Continuous Command Recognition. Instead of having to
pause between each command, you can string a series of commands
together, just like we do with human words to make phrases. It is
much more powerful than just using individual unrelated commands.
If you are a Windows macroing/scripting enthusiast and would like
to or have already started using speech to launch your scripts,
you definitely should take a look at Continuous Command
Recognition. I am using the group (comp.lang.beta) to help
document the thing. No other participants yet, but I intend to
continue at least keeping a record there of my updated global
scripts.
You should probably be a very skilled Windows user, maybe with
some programming experience, but a passion for making Windows
dance might be the only basic requirement. Python programming
experience might help too, for tweaking Dragonfly itself, but I
just use what the author gives me.
"Dragonfly". Its intent is to allow voice activated
macroing/scripting in Windows without requiring the legal or
medical version of DNS. But it has the extra innovation of
allowing Continuous Command Recognition. Instead of having to
pause between each command, you can string a series of commands
together, just like we do with human words to make phrases. It is
much more powerful than just using individual unrelated commands.
If you are a Windows macroing/scripting enthusiast and would like
to or have already started using speech to launch your scripts,
you definitely should take a look at Continuous Command
Recognition. I am using the group (comp.lang.beta) to help
document the thing. No other participants yet, but I intend to
continue at least keeping a record there of my updated global
scripts.
You should probably be a very skilled Windows user, maybe with
some programming experience, but a passion for making Windows
dance might be the only basic requirement. Python programming
experience might help too, for tweaking Dragonfly itself, but I
just use what the author gives me.