Yin And Yang

This is not a spam question... do you guys use (or know of) a good computer program to type what you speak? (I have so much material for my book that it will take me at least a year to type it up! Lol!)

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Ray  Dart Profile
Ray Dart answered

In a previous life, I worked on using VR software as a means of data capture. I experimented with Dragon. I think they are still in business (they have a web presence, certainly). IBM also had a product.

You will have to make corrections, if you want to present your work formally, there will be mistakes where things like "rose" "rows" "roes" "a rose" "arose", "your" "you're", "there" "their" "they're" etc.

Contextual heuristics have obviated some of these problems in recent years, but cannot fix everything.

If you have a lot of technical terms (I know from experience that organic chemical names, for instance, are a REAL problem) then expect to have to edit a lot of the output if you want to present the output formally.

BUT for transferring notes to a machine-readable/storable form for personal use, it's pretty good.

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Maurice Korvo
Maurice Korvo commented
MS Word used to have a grammar checker that would point those errors out, but I do not know if it is still available.
Ray  Dart
Ray Dart commented
It did, and part of my same job earlier was also to try to create software that would fix the grosser idiocies. You can't get it all right though. I do remember one item of software (and it might have been the MSoft grammar checker) admonishing me for producing text with a "sexist/gender bias" - since I was processing matter from a naval pilot's guide at the time, I found that hard to accept.
Yin And Yang
Yin And Yang commented
The Dragon and "Google Doc's" seem to be the ones popping up. This is very informative! Thank you very much my friend. ☺

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