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To: Austin S. who wrote (3848)10/8/1998 7:55:00 AM
From: Nick  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 10081
 
Speech recognition inching closer -- how much longer will
it take?

By Lisa M. Bowman, ZDNet

New York -- The day when computers accurately understand speech is inching ever closer.

Several companies are touting a HAL-like future at Internet World (sans the movie star computer's killer
instinct, of course). One of the biggest announcements so far to come out of the Internet World show
here is an alliance among Motorola Corp., Visa Inc., Nuance Comminucations, and others, to back a
so-called V-commerce initiative. Though mainly still hype, the move will ultimately provide a common
way for computers to retrieve and read voice technology.

Tip of the iceberg
Speech recognition companies are just now clearing the major accuracy hurdles that have kept the
technology from becoming widely adopted, and the common language will allow companies to
incorporate speech recognition into more applications, especially those for e-commerce.

It's just the tip of the iceberg, according General Magic, one of the members of the alliance. The
company is demonstrating its new product, Portico, which lets users call in to retrieve voice and e-mail
messages. A computerized voice reads the messages back and lets users enter items in their calendar --
all by using a phone. The speech recognition software can be synchronized with desktop software such
as Microsoft Corp.'s Outlook and with devices such as the PalmPilot. The company has been signing up
users to the service -- which costs as little as $19.95 per month for 60 minutes -- and was rolled out in
the summer. It's also distributed through partners such as cellular phone providers and made a big
marketing push in recent weeks.

Dreams of Star Trek
Another speech recognition company, Lernout & Hauspie, eventually plans to add speech recognition to
its new translation server software. Right now, iTranslator lets a company translate the text on its Web
site in almost real-time to common languages including Spanish, German and French. The product was
released Tuesday. In the future, the company foresees a future where people can speak into the computer
and the software will translate the speech into text in another language.

That's not in the immediate future, however. "Everyone wants the Star Trek philosophy now, but that's
still a few years away," company spokesman Richard Levine said.

Currently, L&H sells speech recognition products that allow a user to dictate commands to Microsoft's
Office software, commands such as "make it red" in Word and "copy that cell" in Excel.

The company also sells the technology to vertical markets, including the medical industry. Microsoft has
invested $45 million in the company and has said it will eventually add speech recognition to the OS.
Levine said that will lead to a need for more speech applications that work with Microsoft's OS, a need
L&H plans to fill.