| BASICS
1) Make sure that your microphone,
headset or handheld is set up correctly. This is the
number one cause of poor transcription accuracy.
- Sound Test Option 1
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To test, Open your Windows Sound
Recorder and record something. If it comes out warped,
then that is your problem. For handhelds and digital
recorders, use the sound recorder to test your sound files (.WAV
files).
-
To open, click "Start", "Programs",
"Accessories", "Entertainment", "Sound Recorder".
-
You can record something here or open a
sound file that was transferred from your handheld.
- Check your "Settings".
-
To see settings, click "Start",
"Programs", "Accessories", "Entertainment", "Volume Control".
Look at both "recording" and "Playback" properties.
-
Click "Options" in "Volume Control" to
toggle back and forth. These options are occasionally set
wrong because of some other program. Adjust them until you get
a good recording.
-
Note "SPDIF" should be muted in XP.
- Sound Test Option 2
2) Another major cause of poor
transcription accuracy is not having your profile matched with your
current headset, microphone or handheld.
-
Each recording device (headset, etc.)
needs to be trained separately. A separate profile needs to be
set up for each.
-
You cannot just swap recording devices
and continue.
3) To increase performance of
transcription, run these tools from "Accuracy Center"
4) Get the latest software patch
from ScanSoft.
http://support.scansoft.com/downloads/
5) Many (hundreds) scripts are
already built into Dragon. To view the most popular scripts for an
individual program, just say "Open Command List" while in the specific
program (obviously have DNS open also).
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