Dragon Naturally Speaking Premium version 11 review
I now have a video of model 11.five at www.youtube.com If you want to see how incredible model 11.5 is when using the iPod Touch as a wireless microhphone, just take a look right here: www.youtube.com Remember to watch that as well. I present you Dragon Naturally Talking Premium version 11 in genuine use – you are going to see the accuracy of the speech to text conversion reside, as I talk. This is best seen in 1 of the hello there-res versions. For a very good headset to go with it, consider a seem at amzn.to I am going to be uploading a video clip showing Dragon version 11.five soon.
Video Rating: 5 / 5

@101cokecan I think they do a German language version, but I guess covering all the popular languages of the world would be an incredibly huge undertaking. And you’re right, it’s really not suitable for someone who doesn’t speak English fluently.
it works perfect for me because i speak english as my first language but my friends cant use it that well because english is their second language. I use it for essays and i can do them soooooo much quicker. Also you need a good heaphone. 10/10.
@LetsMango If there are several voices, it’s not going to work correctly. It’s only designed to “hear” and understand once voice at a time, for a given profile.
Will this program be able to reconize what I am saying on a recorded tape during an interview with a client? The audio is good quality, but there is some background noise.
Thank you for your helpful advice on the benefits of an upgraded sound card and a USB microphome which I will investigate. I saw you promised to issue a tutorial on updating the User Profile. Have you done this and if so can you prvide a link to it as I have not been able to find it. I found your video very useful and clear and would like more guidance!
@carolinewentzel1 If your laptop has a good sound card built in, a better microphone might give you better results, but quite often a better sound card (audio interface) will give significantly better results even with the same microphone. In particular, if you can use one of the new USB microphones you can avoid some of the digital noise that basic built in sound cards tend to generate.
The Logitech Clearchat range of headset mics is one that I know from personal experience works well.
Dragon tells me that the microphone quality is not good. I have seen references to laptops requiring a sound card. Can someone tell me if this would enhance performance of Dragon or will an upgraded microphone be sufficient?
@xoxluckycharmsx It can do basic punctuation automatically, although I never use that. I think it’s going to be a long time before they can get something that can do punctuation really well. It’s much harder to do than you think. If you have trouble with punctuation, a machine is going to have even more trouble.
It’s not a grammar tutor. It’s a live transcription software, in reality.
So you’re saying this program doesn’t put in the punctuations for you? and it doesn’t tell you why you need it there too??? wow that this program sucks….wasn’t what I was looking for good thing I haven’t bought it yet
@shayansidiqi I use Camtasia which I find gives very good results. You can find it at techsmith . com/camtasia
Which Software are u using for recording video. Name and Link.
@trey0189 You can set Dragon to add commas and periods to your dictation, but it can’t handle more complex punctuation. Personally, I don’t like the way it adds that punctuation automatically anyway, so I never use that myself. If you want to try it, it’s on the TOOLS menu, under AUTO-FORMATTING OPTIONS. Unless you’re exceptionally bad at punctuation, I think Dragon is likely to d a worse job than you are.
Does naturally add commas and other puntuation. Thats what i’m kinda bad at
lol whut
@misslaurie948 Personally, these days, I now use a good quality condenser microphone running through an external audio interface, but that’s overkill for most people. I do other audio work so for me it’s worth having such equipment. I use the SE X1 condenser microphone (superb sound quality) and a Saffire audio interface. The SE X1 is about £100 ($160), so it’s definitely a considered investment, but if you want extreme accuracy, it’s a good model to go for.
what microphone would you recommend?
@webmaster12345678910 I would recommend one of the Logitech products, which I’ve had good success with. I use a condenser microphone now, because I have one for other things and the quality is superb. But something like the Logitech ClearChat Comfort USB gives very good results, if you make sure you position the mouthpiece carefully. See the link in the description.
@Salisbury2015 Thank you for your kind comments and I’m glad you found it useful. A good microphone is a must and once you get it all trained up and you’re used to it, it can look like magic to see it work!
@blahyourhamster I am currently running Dragon NaturallySpeaking version 11 and I can tell you it works in practically every application basically any program that has a text field will work with the software
hope I helped
What headset would you recommend?
@blahyourhamster yes, you can use this software in notepad, wordpad, microsoft word, and even in visual studio.
@blahyourhamster yes, you can use Dragon NaturallySpeaking the dictate into other text boxes, as I am doing here. I am recording a video while I am doing this and I will upload the video in a few moments so that you can see this in use. Let me now switch to notepad so that you can see that being used.
I hope the new video is useful for you and I will put a link to that as soon as I have uploaded it!
Very cool, can you use this in other applications such as Notepad, or even Visual Studio?