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 | | From: | James Salsman | | Subject: | Re: dictation from cellphones? | | Date: | Tue, 14 Dec 2004 17:19:28 GMT |
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 | > Digitized signals whether they be from a cordless phone with 2.4GHz > bandwidth, cell phones, or Bluetooth compress their signals and clip > the beginning and ends of words/sentences. This is deadly to speech > recognition software although the human ear can fill in the missing > parts.
Fair enough, but that is one of the things that the Multimedia Messaging System (MMS) standard is designed to overcome. You could, in theory, send an MMS message from a cellphone to a software package that uses a USB device driver to emulate a microphone. Many of the speech vendors already have means to dictate from spooled audio, do they not?
Then the question becomes, how bad is MMS's Adaptive Multi-Rate (AMR) vocodec, and there are different extents of AMR compression. Frankly, with MMS, and the bandwidth that some of these phones operate at when they are in data-mode, only in poor-signal areas would there be a problem. The MMS email message signaling profile, which allows for a kind of an "always-on, but fully spooled if off" operation, has solutions to those problems, too.
Sincerely, James -- www.readsay.com - maker of the ReadSay PROnounce English literacy system 400 MHz PDA included: $499 -- http://www.readsay.com/PROnounce.html
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