Very few people know this, but OS/2 Warp was light years ahead of
current Windows products with its speech technology.
On Fri, 2011-06-17 at 17:55 -0400, Eric S. Johansson wrote:
On 6/17/2011 5:12 PM, planas wrote:
The current problem is we do not have any good information of what
features are not very important and do not extend the functionality for
all but a few users. The question is what mix of included and extensible
features should be available beyond those that are important. One of the
problems is you need either a lot different users surveyed at the same
time or smaller number surveyed over a longer period of time. For
example, most of the time I do not use a table of contents in my
documents but when I need the feature I must have it. How many people
need this feature irregularly versus those that often use it? I do not
know.
this reminds be of a conversation I had with Microsoft people back in 2000. I'm
disabled, I use speech recognition and quite frankly liberated office is not
terribly speech recognition friendly (including its name). The conversation I
was having with Microsoft was about speech enabling Microsoft Word. They kept
coming up with these really huge unmanageable grammars to try and make every GUI
elements accessible. I said "but I only use 10% of word" to which they replied
"so does everybody else. The problem is they all use a different 10%"
I don't know if it's comfort to know that you're suffering from the same
problems as Microsoft Word and there really isn't a very good way to solve the
problem.
What I do in a speech interface is I try very hard to isolate grammars based on
context and maybe that's the kind of thing you need to do. Yes, you will have
cases where you have two ways of saying the same thing in two different contexts
but it can't be helped.
and for what it's worth, to do good speech user interface (i.e. not something
nuance gives you), it's becoming apparent to me that you need a backdoor
interface giving read/write access to all GUI/plug-in accessible data. Then the
speech user interface can present the information and operations in a UI
appropriate context.
--
Roland Hughes, President
Logikal Solutions
(630)-205-1593
http://www.theminimumyouneedtoknow.com
http://www.infiniteexposure.net
No U.S. troops have ever lost their lives defending our ethanol
reserves.
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Context
- Re: [libreoffice-users] MSO's 80/20 rule: 80% of the people use about 20% of the functionality. (continued)
Re: [libreoffice-users] MSO's 80/20 rule: 80% of the people use about 20% of the functionality. · lee
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