How are you guys going to choose what to enhance? Low hanging fruit vs. highest productivity gains? I've not studied it, but I'd be amazed if the biggest improvement in performance could be achieved by anything other than improving the correction process, and that's speaking as a Dragon user about Dragon. Have you guys (or anyone else) sat down and worked out how long/much effort/detraction-from-the-task/ etc. each step of document production with SR takes people? Fascinating stuff! Regards and appreciation, Sacha -----Original Message----- From: macvoice-bounces at listserver.themacintoshguy.com [mailto:macvoice-bounces at listserver.themacintoshguy.com] On Behalf Of Chuck Rogers Sent: 08 November 2004 17:27 To: A place to discuss speech recognition on Macintosh. Subject: Re: [MV] Where are we now? Brian (and everyone else): Your question is sort of a skewed "horse or cart" question. The answer is "both" in the sense that the cart can only go as fast as the horse (or horses) pulling it, but the cart must also be built to handle both the speed at which the horse(s) will take it, as well as the roads on which it will travel. As computers get faster, engines will become more capable, and software will be written to take advantage of increased computing power. In the case of iListen, we still have work to do on the cart (in terms of enhancements to the application) that we think are more worth the results we will see than building a new cart for the faster horse(s). To refer back to my original message, the horses are not significantly faster than they were two years ago in terms of speech recognition. Will you get better accuracy from a G5 than a G4? In the vast majority of cases, yes (as long as you keep in mind there are other factors besides just processing speed that affect recognition). But we aren't at the point yet that we should forgo building enhancements to the existing app and turn our attentions to a new speech engine. We are at the point where we are looking at what that engine might be, and starting to scope out how we might migrate to it over time. Once that is in place, we will have a better handle on when we start writing code for a new engine. So to answer your question directly: the major roadblock towards better accuracy is indeed processing power. But a 4Ghz G5 (or even G6 or G7) probably won't provide significant boost there either. You are really looking at computers 5 or 10 years from now before an engine can really be thought of differently in terms of how it processes information. The existing engines will continue to be improved over this time, but such changes will be incremental, not monumental. In terms of ease of use, there is a lot we can do on our end now, without the need for faster processors - and some of the enhancements to which I have been referring will certainly be in that direction. Best Regards, Chuck Rogers, Chief Evangelist MacSpeech, Inc. On Nov 8, 2004, at 11:01 AM, Brian Braunschweiger wrote: > At 5:29 PM -0600 11/06/2004, Chuck Rogers wrote: >> But the time will come soon when we will need to replace the engine >> that works underneath iListen. Are we working on it? Let's just say >> we are starting to carefully weigh our options. As to when a version >> of iListen will be available with a new speech engine, that is >> anyone's guess - but I would say we are at least a year or more away. >> We still have quite a few things we would like to introduce with the >> current engine first. > > > > A "just curious" question I have had: > > Is the major road block to better accuracy and ease of use more on the > side of the speech engine or more on the side of the user's computer's > horsepower? Should I be cheering on a 4ghz Mac or for Phillips and > iListen programmers to make major advances? > > > Brian > -- > Brian Braunschweiger > > > "Worry does not empty tomorrow of its sorrow. It empties today of > its strength." > - Corrie Ten Boom > _______________________________________________ > MacVoice mailing list > MacVoice at listserver.themacintoshguy.com > http://listserver.themacintoshguy.com/mailman/listinfo/macvoice > _______________________________________________ MacVoice mailing list MacVoice at listserver.themacintoshguy.com http://listserver.themacintoshguy.com/mailman/listinfo/macvoice