Thinking Out Loud
May 30th, 2011 | Posted in Tactics

I’m going to try to write an entry where I do not use the keyboard and simply use Dragon Dictation on the iPad as my tool. It’s interesting to see how well you have to speak in order for it to understand your voice. I wonder how long it’ll be until we don’t use keyboards at all. For people like me who have a hard time typing, this is a great tool. Back in high school, I decided to take foods class instead of typing. It is a decision that I do not regret. Although it has created some challenges for me in terms of using a keyboard.
I pretty much hunt and peck instead of using a standard method of typing. It’s effective, but usually my thoughts are much faster than my hands are able to translate them into typing.
I guess it depends on your learning preference. For someone like me, a person who really thinks out loud, dictation is a wonderful way to get thoughts down into writing without having to slow down and type them. I can get all my thoughts down and the dictation takes care of the typing and then later I can go back and edit them accordingly.
It seems like we’re getting closer to the day where interaction with the computer, and other input devices, has the appearance of working with another human being. You can never really 100% completely remove humans from the interaction but in terms of import storage and delivery it is a wonderful means of getting information recorded quickly. Some people have problems using a virtual keyboard as well, and I think that using your voice for dictation with the iPad or iPhone is probably an even faster way of inputting data. And, imagine if you’re able to send a tweet or update your Facebook or draft an e-mail while you’re driving or while your hands are occupied and not have to worry about distraction or losing focus from another task.
Typing on the keyboard also requires you to be relatively close to the computer. It requires you to lean over closely to the computer while focusing from a very short distance. Dictation technology gives you the freedom to be able to move your hands or to write or to use your hands for other task while you’re dictating and the computer is tracking what you’re saying. It’s not perfect, and it probably never will be 100%. But, it gives you the freedom to be able to write what you’re thinking without having to type.
So, this entire entry was dictated on an iPad. Now, I will go back and do some editing of the text before I publish it. This is obviously necessary, and it’s something that you would normally do even if you were typing it traditionally. The accuracy is pretty amazing. And, I could completely see how I could use this more often and more comfortably than typing on the keyboard.
For me, dictation is much faster and efficient and I believe that it increases my productivity significantly. Add on the fact that using virtual keyboard iPad slows you down even more, the benefit is just tremendous.
June 1, 2011: Great and relevant recent article at GigaOM “What Voice Recognition Technology Could Mean for Apple — and All of Us.”
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