Sep 222007

I’m not sure if our personal devices have to get smaller, but that is the current trend. A full qwerty keyboard is already a trade off. Either the keys are too small to be usable or the device is larger than it would be otherwise. Once we get down to just a number pad, even the 10-12 keys start to limit how small a device can be and take up valuable space on the device that could be used for displaying media or other input. Look at the iphone. They had to go to a touch screen just to get a decent amount of space. Of course the touch screen is pretty sexy, but don’t let it distract you from the fact that we are running out of space as devices shrink. This article, gives a few examples of voice into user input. My Motorola phone does voice recognition without any sort of training. Granted, this is a limited domain, so it doesn’t have as many choices to process, but it’s easily conceivable to me that increased processing power will keep enlarging the envelope until we can dictate to our computers without training them. Jott seems to do close to this already. It’s kind of hard to believe how powerful and flexible Jott is until you try it, but I would still rather have that power contained in a device I have control of. How long until my cell phone or mp3 player can do that on its own? Of course, I said voice recognition was the penultimate method, meaning there is still some room for growth. However, it does appear that progress is being made on the ultimate user input method. I can definitely see this opening up new possibilities.

2 Responses to “Voice Recognition: The Penultimate User Input Method”

  1. [...] … f. How long until my cell phone or mp3 player can do that on its own?… source: Voice Recognition: The Penultimate User Input Method, [...]

  2. Wahoo says:

    Thank you for sharing!

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