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| | Sony ICDSX68DR9 Digital Voice Recorder with Dragon NaturallySpeaking RE Software |  | Brand: Sony Category: CE
List Price: $199.95 Buy New: $154.00 You Save: $45.95 (23%)
New (28)
Avg. Customer Rating: 4 reviews
Color: Silver Media: Electronics Autographed: No Memorabilia: No Batteries Included: Yes Shipping Weight (lbs): 9.5 Dimensions (in): 0.6 x 1.3 x 4.8
MPN: ICDSX68DR9 Model: ICDSX68DR9 UPC: 027242731783 EAN: 0027242731783 ASIN: B00142U4XQ
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: Brand New! Factory Sealed! includes all original manufacturer's box contents.
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| Customer Reviews:
A Completely Different Experience than the other reviewer August 27, 2008 3 out of 4 found this review helpful
I'm not sure why one of the other reviewers had such a bad experience. I'm SO glad I bought this product BEFORE I read the negative reviews. I purchased this recorder and then read the reviews and decided to open it and go for it anyway.
The installation was a breeze and even the dragon software held my hand every step of the way. I was up and running in about 20 minutes. I installed the software, made a test recording, transferred the file, read the provided passage for voice recognition, and the software started transcribing my notes with a fair degree of accuracy.
I'm dictating case notes and this product is working wonderfully for me.
Great for keeping track of meetings May 27, 2008 10 out of 10 found this review helpful
I purchased this knowing that it also included the Dragon Naturally Speaking Recorder Edition software with the intention of transcribing meeting recordings into text as MoM (minutes of meeting). The recorder itself is very simple to operate for recording and play back. The included Sony software that allows you to convert the recordings into a mp3 file onto your computer's hard drive was equally simple to use. The quality of the recording was excellent. However, attempting to use the Dragon Naturally Speaking software to try and convert the recorded meeting into text was not very good. The software was designed pretty much for an individual's speech pattern not for multple person speaking on a single recording. The Dragon Naturally Speaking software does allow you to set up multiple speech and writing patterns. The skinny is that both products are very good but like anything else the Dragon Naturally Speaking software will no doubt get better as times passes. If you are looking for a simple tool to record a single voice pattern and convert into a word or text document, this combination is for you.
Dragon Software is Horrible May 12, 2008 3 out of 6 found this review helpful
While the voice recorder is good, the included Dragon software is horrible. Don't buy, unless you love frustration.
Ignore the stars. Read the review. May 2, 2008 57 out of 57 found this review helpful
I'm writing this review with this software and recorder package. It's fair to say that I'm very conflicted about it. On the one hand, now that it's all working correctly, this is a tremendous product package that seems to offer enormous possibilities. On the other hand, getting to the point where it actually works can best be described as torture and not for the faint of heart. The recorder itself works very well, is quite accurate, and has instructions are clear and easy to understand. The battery life is seems quite long and the capacity in terms of the amount of recordings that it can hold is enormous. I did have to go to Sony help to get the recorder software (not the dictation software) to work on Vista -- relatively painless.
So much for the good stuff. The "Dragon Naturally Speaking Preferred 9 Recorder Version" software, however, comes with virtually no instructions. Nowhere in the package or in the recorder instruction manual is there anything useful about using it. Using the help system that comes with the software is initially awful and usually unhelpful. After a seemingly uncomplicated installation process, I quickly ran into roadblocks figuring out what to do to get it working. At the website of Nuance software, the manufacturer of Dragon Naturally Speaking, you look in vain for any suggestions. They mentioned one free help call and a charge for each call after that. More remarkable is discovering that the "Recorder Version" software appears nowhere on their website. I learned from Sony that this version of Dragon is less than fully functional, but how it differs, I have no idea. One of the first installation screens allows you to upgrade, of course, at a cost. I called the Sony help line, level 1,multiple times with no useful results until they gave me the number for Sony level 2 support. A call back from their expert on the Dragon software never happened. Another tech told me that I couldn't call Nuance software for assistance because calls to them would be met with, "this is a Sony product. Talk to them." There were no instructions or manuals at Sony on how to use the product. Although it took multiple calls spread out over several days, the tech got the program functioning for me by using one of those programs where they take control of my computer remotely and demonstrated the basic functions to me. I was pleased with his persistence and patience. It may be that the upgrade will prove worth it at some point, and I may do it. At the same time, I wonder if the upgrade will continue to offer a reasonable interface with the software that the recorder uses that connects to Dragon. The business practices of Nuance software are reprehensible. How Sony and got roped into putting this package together with no instructions for a complicated software package is beyond me.
For disgusted users of earlier versions of the Dragon software, as I was, I can say that this package is head and shoulders above the others that required countless hours of training but still produced text that required endless proof reading and correcting. With this software, the dictation to text has been nearly perfect except for words that are unusual, and this problem is the same as having a new secretary confronted with vocabulary unfamiliar to her. Still, Nuance's decision to allow a version of the software onto the market with no documentation, a fourth rate help system and a market model that seems to rely on immediate upgrading and paying for help is unconscionable.
This is where I am with it today. It now seems to work almost flawlessly, but I've left a lot of stuff out about how I got there. There are many things I don't yet know how to do, but I can get from the recorder to accurately typed text in a word processor. If you're up to the challenge, the price you pay for this package may be worth the difficulties.
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