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< The state of AJAX for Java, at JavaOne Afterglow 2006   JavaPaste 1.0 released : pastebin with highlighting, diffing, private pastebins and image uploads >
Voice recognition to the rescue!
For quite a long time I have been suffering from some form of RSI and have tried out different keyboards to try to alleviate the pain. The past three years I have been able to get by thanks to the TouchStream keyboard from FingerWorks. However, this company doesn't exist anymore and I've heard an increasing amount of reports about TouchStream keyboards that are failing. I know that mine will not last forever either and I'm starting to suffer from the fact that it's still a traditional keyboard with horizontally twisted hands. This is not a natural position and the strain it puts on my wrists is forcing me to take frequent breaks again.



I started looking for a new keyboard and found the AlphaGrips. It combines most of the things that I find important: no need to reach out for the mouse, vertically positioned hands, limited finger movements, and the ability to type while standing up. I've had it for almost three weeks now, and my typing speed is slowly becoming acceptable. Sadly, it's still a keyboard and I still need to move my fingers and position my hands in a certain way. I can already feel another kind of stress building up.

Last week I showed my AlphaGrips to Jonas Bonér at TSSJS Europe, and he told me that he also had serious problems with RSI. Recently he started using voice recognition and told me that it worked extremely well. This sounded very interesting, because when I played with voice recognition a few years ago, it really wasn't very useful at all.



When I came home from the conference, I ordered myself a copy of iListen and started training it with the Logitech headset that I've been using for Skype. While it sort of worked, the recognition rate was not good enough for it to be useful. It seems that for voice recognition software to be really precise, you need to have a specialized headset that's optimized for the task. I thus ordered one of the supported headsets, the Plantronics .Audio 85, and it arrived today.

Holy Moses! As soon as I started using this headset, the recognition rate really increased up to at least 95 percent! I'm going to try to use voice recognition now for as many tasks as possible. It's great that technology allows geeks to continue to spend an obscene amount of time in front of the computer! :p
posted by Geert Bevin in Computing on Jul 4, 2006 3:20 PM : 5 comments [permalink]
 

Comments

Re: Voice recognition to the rescue!
Very interesting - I hadn't looked at that stuff in like 5 years. I'd love to give it another shot, but unfortunately, they don't offer a free download :(
Re: Voice recognition to the rescue!
I know, that sucks :/
Re: Voice recognition to the rescue!
Hi Geert,

does your voice recognition program also work for dictating java and other programming languages? Can you dictate directly in your IDE and also navigate with the voice (like choosing from a list of classnames) and simulate key presses with the voice (like ctrl+space in eclipse)?

Cheers
Mike
Re: Voice recognition to the rescue!
Hi, you can setup any shortcut you like and give it a voice command. You can have it type into your IDE, no problem. However, for coding, I prefer using keys and thus use my alphagrips keyboard.
Re: Voice recognition to the rescue!
Maybe your case is too severe for this to help, but some years back I had horrible wrist pains too. Used to have to ice my wrists every day. I switched to a Kinesis contoured keyboard and replaced my mouse with a trackball; within 6 months the pain was all but gone. If I type for too long without a break it still starts hurting a bit, but I try to take that as a sign I need to get up and stretch anyway.

It's kind of expensive for a keyboard, but I guess you're used to that too. Despite the cost, I own three of them.

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