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Technology Stocks : Disk Drive Sector Discussion Forum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Stitch who wrote (5502)2/9/1999 5:48:00 PM
From: Yogi - Paul  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 9256
 
Stitch,
A thrill ride, yes. RDRT has had a good 1st quarter (share price) once in it's history. Meanwhile, many were amazingly impressed by their $.02 gain in 4th qtr 1998. Much above estimates, granted but ,gracious me, this is an issue with a history of earnings disappointments, accelerating debt, loss of it's major customer, post earnings sell offs, GMR heads are an extremely difficult challenge to produce efficiently.
The move from $5.+ to $10.00 was justified. The move from $10.00 to $20.00 was nuts. $10.00 bucks and I cover. $17.00 and I cover. Like you say, a thrill ride.
As full disclosure, RDRT has always cost me money but I can't seem to shake it. Call it an addiction.
CPQ? Bought a bunch at $26.00 (going from memory). Wife wants a new kitchen. What can I say?
<<There is increasing demand for capacity in the corporate sector and nascent applications such as video/multi-media etc. >>
Corporate sector? Yes, absolutely but I prefer to be invested in data storage management (EMC) rather than data storage capacity. SEG, I bought a little bit because I might be totally wrong <g>.
Video/multimedia? I just don't buy it. Never have and I know I am not intellectually capable of explaining why. To my discredit.

Crazy after all these years,

Yogi





To: Stitch who wrote (5502)2/9/1999 7:59:00 PM
From: Mark Oliver  Respond to of 9256
 
Sort of off topic.

Or maybe on topic since Dragon is a Seagate related business. Anyway, this was an obvious direction we had pondered once on Pierre's PC thread. It will make the archiving of audio information much more usefull. Now for example, you could save all voice mail and refer back to important conversations using a word search. The same would be true for TV broadcasts, etc.

This would be a big demand driver for storage.

Regards,

Mark

Dragon Systems® Demonstrates Technology That Indexes and Searches Audio Recordings for Speech Content

New AudioMining™ Technology Uses Award-Winning Speech Recognition Engine to Quickly Capture and Index Information Contained in Recorded Video Footage, Radio Broadcasts, Telephone Conversations, Call Center Dialogues, Help Desk Recordings, and More

Press Contact:

Renee L. Blodgett
Dragon Systems
617.796.0348
reneeb@dragonsys.com

Demo Station #P55 at DEMO


INDIAN WELLS, Calif. - February 8, 1999 - New advanced technology to retrieve specified information contained in hours of recorded video footage, radio and television broadcasts, telephone conversations, call center dialogues, help desk recordings, and more, was demonstrated today by Dragon Systems, Inc. of Newton, Mass. The company previewed this technology at Demo '99, a leading, invitation-only, computer industry conference focused exclusively on emerging technologies and new products.

The Dragon Systems AudioMining technology converts audio data into searchable text, which is easily accessible by keyword searching. This new capability which eliminates the need to listen to hours of recordings to find necessary information, can save time and increase productivity. It gives users immediate random access to recorded materials and enables them to access material using its speech content. Applications of this technology include:

LARGE TECHNICAL SUPPORT CENTERS / HELP DESKS - A technical support manager who is responsible for providing feedback to the product development team could use this technology to search a database of recorded technical support calls, determine the issues that end users are contending with and advise engineering accordingly.

CALL CENTERS - A stockbroker or call center operator who records all phone calls to document customer orders and conversations can gain access to specific conversations to verify information concerning transactions. Marketing executives could also access customer requests and feedback from a company database.

BROADCAST MEDIA - A news editor at a television or radio station could search archives of recorded broadcasts to retrieve relevant information and clips pertinent to breaking news almost immediately.

CONFERENCE MANAGEMENT - A conference management organization that records proceedings, could use this technology to create an index of key topics for tapes of those sessions. This index should be printed to indicate tape number and time into the tape. If the material is on CD-ROM audio, the information would be directly accessible with the index.

LAW ENFORCEMENT / SECURITY - Police and security forces that need to search hours of recorded phone calls or radio transmissions can use this technology to quickly obtain critical information.

"There are hundreds of thousands of hours of recorded speech from meetings to telephone calls in the hands of corporations today," said Dragon Systems Vice-President of North American Marketing Roger Matus. "These recordings contain nuggets of information that are invisible to companies. This new technology takes data that is invisible and makes it visible."
The Dragon Systems AudioMining technology is built upon some of the same underlying speech technology used in Dragon NaturallySpeaking™, the widely-acclaimed speech product that has garnered more than 70 industry awards worldwide and is the best selling speech retail product in the USA, according to PC Data (December 1998). The system employs this underlying technology to develop transcripts of recorded text, as accurately as possible with untrained speech files, which are then searchable by keywords. Users will search these transcripts to retrieve information relevant to their current projects. This new capability supplements existing Dragon Systems solutions by taking advantage of the underlying technology to help end-users take advantage of speech recognition to improve productivity.

"The technology being previewed by Dragon Systems makes recorded data searchable in a way that previously was not possible," said Chris Shipley, editor and publisher of DemoLetter and executive producer of the Demo conference. "I am excited to have Dragon Systems back at Demo for the third year in a row and to have them preview this new capability for the first time."

###
Dragon Systems, Inc., is a worldwide leader in PC speech recognition. Dragon Systems develops and markets high-performance, cost-effective speech and language technology that, in multiple world languages (including American English, British English, French, German, Italian, Spanish and Swedish), enable users to create text, issue commands, enter and access data simply by speaking. The company also licenses technology worldwide through developers, distributors, resellers, OEMs (Original Equipment Manufacturers) and ISVs (Integrated Software Vendors). Dragon Systems ports its technology across multiple operating systems and hardware platforms — from hand-held devices and PCs to workstations, and is pursuing leading-edge research and development projects for computer and telecommunications applications. Since introducing Dragon NaturallySpeaking, the first large vocabulary continuous speech recognition system able to create general purpose text, in 1997, the Company has received over 70 major industry awards worldwide.
Founded in 1982, Dragon Systems is headquartered in Newton, Massachusetts; its Dragon Systems UK Ltd. subsidiary, which is focused on speech recognition for t elephony and high-noise environments, is based in Cheltenham, England; Dragon Systems GmbH is located in Munich, Germany, Dragon Systems also has offices in France. Dragon Systems can be found on the world wide web at: www.dragonsys.com or www.naturalspeech.com.

Dragon Systems, and the Dragon Systems logo are registered trademarks, NaturallySpeaking, AudioMining and The Natural Speech Company are trademarks of Dragon Systems, Inc. All other trademarks are of their respective holders.