Nuance Dragon Voice Recognition Software



Dragon NaturallySpeaking
Developer(s)Nuance Communications
Initial releaseJune 1997; 23 years ago
Stable release
15 / September 2016; 4 years ago
Operating systemMicrosoft Windows, macOS
Available in8 languages
TypeSpeech recognition
LicenseProprietary
Websitewww.nuance.com
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Dragon NaturallySpeaking (also known as Dragon for PC, or DNS)[1] is a speech recognition software package developed by Dragon Systems of Newton, Massachusetts, which was acquired first by Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products and later by Nuance Communications. It runs on Windowspersonal computers. Version 15 (Professional Individual and Legal Individual),[2] which supports 32-bit and 64-bit editions of Windows 7, 8 and 10, was released in August 2016.[3][4] The macOS version is called Dragon Professional Individual for Mac, version 6[5] or Dragon for Mac.

Features[edit]

Dragon NaturallySpeaking uses a minimal user interface. As an example, dictated words appear in a floating tooltip as they are spoken (though there is an option to suppress this display to increase speed), and when the speaker pauses, the program transcribes the words into the active window at the location of the cursor. (Dragon does not support dictating to background windows.) The software has three primary areas of functionality: voice recognition in dictation with speech transcribed as written text, recognition of spoken commands, and text-to-speech: speaking text content of a document. Voice profiles can be accessed by different computers in a networked environment, although the audio hardware and configuration must be identical to those of the machine generating the configuration. The Professional version allows creation of custom commands to control programs or functions not built into NaturallySpeaking.

History[edit]

Dr. James Baker laid out the description of a speech understanding system called DRAGON in 1975.[6] In 1982 he and Dr. Janet M. Baker, his wife, founded Dragon Systems to release products centered around their voice recognition prototype.[7] He was President of the company and she was CEO.

DragonDictate was first released for DOS, and utilized hidden Markov models, a probabilistic method for temporal pattern recognition. At the time, the hardware was not powerful enough to address the problem of word segmentation, and DragonDictate was unable to determine the boundaries of words during continuous speech input. Users were forced to enunciate one word at a time, clearly separated by a small pause after each word. DragonDictate was based on a trigram model, and is known as a discrete utterance speech recognition engine.[8]

Dragon Systems released NaturallySpeaking 1.0 as their first continuous dictation product in 1997.[9]

Joel Gould was the director of emerging technologies at Dragon Systems. Gould was the principal architect and lead engineer for the development of Dragon NaturallyOrganized (1.0), Dragon NaturallySpeaking Mobile Organizer (3.52), Dragon NaturallySpeaking (1.0 through 2.02), and DragonDictate for Windows (1.0). Gould also designed the tutorials in both DragonDictate for DOS version 2.0 and Dragon Talk.[citation needed]

The company was then purchased in June 2000 by Lernout & Hauspie, a Belgium-based corporation that was subsequently found to have been perpetrating financial fraud.[10] Following the all-share deal advised by Goldman Sachs, Lernout & Hauspie declared bankruptcy in November 2000. The deal was not originally supposed to be all stock and the unavailability of the Goldman Sachs team to advise concerning the change in terms was one of the grounds of the Bakers' subsequent lawsuit. The Bakers had received stock worth hundreds of millions of US dollars, but were only able to sell a few million dollars' worth before the stock lost all its value as a result of the accounting fraud. The Bakers sued Goldman Sachs for negligence, intentional misrepresentation and breach of fiduciary duty, which in January 2013 led to a 23-day trial in Boston. The jury cleared Goldman Sachs of all charges.[11] Following the bankruptcy of Lernout & Hauspie, the rights to the Dragon product line were acquired by ScanSoft of Burlington, Massachusetts, also a Goldman Sachs client. In 2005 ScanSoft launched a de facto acquisition of Nuance Communications, and rebranded itself as Nuance.[12]

As of 2012 LG Smart TVs include voice recognition feature powered by the same speech engine as Dragon NaturallySpeaking.[13]

Versions[edit]

Dragon Naturally Speaking VersionRelease dateEditionsOperating Systems Supported
1.0April 1997PersonalWindows 95, NT 4.0.
2.0November 1997Standard, Preferred, DeluxeWindows 95, NT 4.0
3.0October 1998Point & Speak, Standard, Preferred, Professional (with optional Legal and Medical add-on products)Windows 95, 98, NT 4.0.
4.0August 4, 1999Essentials, Standard, Preferred, Professional, Legal, Medical, MobileWindows 95, 98, NT 4.0 SP3+.
5.0August 2000Essentials, Standard, Preferred, Professional, Legal, MedicalWindows 98, Me, NT 4.0 SP6+, 2000.
6.0November 15, 2001Essentials, Standard, Preferred, Professional, Legal, Medical
7.0March 2003Essentials, Standard, Preferred, Professional, Legal, MedicalWindows 98SE, Me, NT4 SP6+, 2000, XP.
8.0November 2004Essentials, Standard, Preferred, Professional, Legal, MedicalWindows Me (Only Standard and Preferred editions), Windows 2000 SP4+, Windows XP SP1+.
9.0July 2006Standard, Preferred, Professional, Legal, Medical, SDK client, SDK server,Windows 2000 SP4+, XP SP1+.
9.5January 2007Standard, Preferred, Professional, Legal, Medical, SDK client, SDK serverWindows 2000 SP4+, XP SP1+, Vista (32-bit).
10.0August 7, 2008Essentials, Standard, Preferred, Professional, Legal, MedicalWindows 2000 SP4+, XP SP2+ (32-bit), Vista (32-bit). Server 2003.
10.1March 2009Standard, Preferred, Professional, Legal, MedicalWindows 2000 SP4+, XP SP2+ (32-bit), Vista (32-bit and 64-bit), Windows 7 (32 and 64-bit). Server 2003.
11.0August 2010Home, Premium, Professional, LegalWindows XP SP2+ (32-bit), Vista SP1+ (32-bit and 64-bit), 7 (32 and 64-bit). Server 2003, 2008.
11.02011SDK client (DSC), SDK server (DSS)Windows XP SP2+ (32-bit only), Vista SP1+ (32-bit and 64-bit), Windows 7 (32-bit and 64-bit), Windows Server 2003 and 2008, SP1, SP2 and R2 (32-bit and 64-bit)
11.5June 2011Home, Premium, Professional, LegalWindows XP SP2+ (32-bit), Vista SP1+ (32-bit and 64-bit), 7 (32 and 64-bit). Server 2003, 2008.
11.0August 2011Medical (Dragon Medical Practice Edition)Windows XP SP2+ (32-bit), Vista SP1+ (32-bit and 64-bit), 7 (32 and 64-bit). Server 2003, 2008.
12.0October 2012Home, Premium, Professional, LegalWindows XP SP3+ (32-bit), Vista SP2+ (32-bit and 64-bit), 7 (32 and 64-bit), 8 (32 and 64-bit). Server 2008, Server 2008 R2, Server 2012.
12.5February 2013Home, Premium, Professional, LegalWindows XP SP3+ (32-bit), Vista SP2+ (32-bit and 64-bit), 7 (32 and 64-bit), 8 (32 and 64-bit). Server 2008, Server 2008 R2, Server 2012.
12June 2013Medical (Dragon Medical Practice Edition 2)Windows XP SP3+ (32-bit), Vista SP2+ (32-bit and 64-bit), 7 (32 and 64-bit), 8 (32 and 64-bit). Server 2008, Server 2008 R2, Server 2012.
13August 2014Home, Premium, Professional, and Legal.7 (32 and 64-bit), 8.1 (32 and 64-bit). Server 2008, Server 2008 R2, Server 2012. Mac OS X 10.6+ (Intel Processor)
13September 2015Medical (UK, French, German) (Dragon Medical Practice Edition 3)7 (32 and 64-bit), 8.1 (32 and 64-bit), 10 (32 and 64-bit). Server 2008, Server 2008 R2, Server 2012. Mac OS X 10.6+ (Intel Processor)
14September 2015Professional (individual, and Group)7 (32 and 64-bit), 8.1 (32 and 64-bit), 10 (32 and 64-bit). Server 2008, Server 2008 R2, Server 2012. Mac OS X 10.6+ (Intel Processor). Server 2008, Server 2008 R2, Server 2012.
15August 16, 2016Dragon Professional Individual; Dragon Legal Individual; Dragon Professional Individual for Mac (version 6)
15May 1, 2017Dragon Professional Group (Languages: English US and German only)
15January 22, 2018Dragon Medical Practice Edition 4 (Languages: English US)

Dragon NaturallySpeaking 12 is available in the following languages: UK English, US English, French, German, Italian, Spanish, Dutch, and Japanese (aka 'Dragon Speech 11' in Japan).

See also[edit]

Notes[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^Sarnataro, Valerie (2012-11-08). 'Dragon NaturallySpeaking (DNS) 12 Review'. technologyguide.com. Technology Guide. Retrieved 2013-07-25.
  2. ^'Nuance Announces Major New Releases of Dragon for Windows and Mac OS X'. Retrieved 2016-08-22.
  3. ^'Nuance product support for Microsoft Windows Vista'. Archived from the original on 2009-12-15. Retrieved 2009-12-15.
  4. ^'Nuance product support for Microsoft Windows 7'. 2010. Retrieved 16 Aug 2010.
  5. ^'Nuance Announces Major New Releases of Dragon for Windows and Mac OS X'. 2016. Retrieved 2016-08-22.
  6. ^Baker, James K. (1975). 'The DRAGON System - An Overview'. IEEE Transactions on Acoustics, Speech, and Signal Processing. 23 (1): 24–29. doi:10.1109/TASSP.1975.1162650.
  7. ^'History of Speech Recognition and Transcription Software'. Retrieved 2013-07-12.
  8. ^'DragonDictate product information'. Retrieved 2010-02-03.
  9. ^'Dragon NaturallySpeaking 1.0 released'. Retrieved 2010-02-03.
  10. ^'Dragon Systems purchased by Lernout & Hauspie'. New York Times. 2001-05-07. Retrieved 2010-02-03.
  11. ^'Goldman Is Cleared Over a Sale Gone Awry'. New York Times. 2013-01-23. Retrieved 2013-01-23.
  12. ^'ScanSoft and Nuance to Merge'. 2005-05-09. Archived from the original on 2010-05-28. Retrieved 2010-02-03.
  13. ^'Samsung and LG smart TVs share your voice data behind the fine print'. ConsumerReports. 2015-02-09. Retrieved 2016-06-10.

External links[edit]

Dragon
  • Official website for Nuance Communications
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Dragon_NaturallySpeaking&oldid=1018432073'

If you’re an old-timer like me, you probably have memories – maybe fond memories, maybe not – of Dragon Naturally Speaking, for many years the only dictation software for Windows that was even remotely useful. Dragon was quirky, buggy, and frustrating, but it also could be very accurate and we had no other options.

Over the years the name changed and the price went up. The current dictation software for individual PCs from parent company Nuance Communications is Dragon Professional Individual and it costs $500, which suggests pretty strongly that they don’t expect anyone to buy it. It’s almost as if selling licensed software to individuals isn’t very important to them anymore.

If dictation software for PCs isn’t Nuance’s primary business, then what has it been doing lately?

Funny you should ask. It has spent the last few years finding such interesting things to do that Microsoft just agreed to acquire the company for nearly $20 billion dollars.

The future of the company lies in healthcare and enterprises. I’ll tell you a little bit about that below. For me, though, it’s even more interesting to look at the history of the company, which goes back to the birth of personal computing and includes lots of names that stir up memories from the distant past, as well as illustrating a business practice which perhaps has not been very good for the modern world.

Mark Benjamin took over as Nuance CEO in 2018 and began a transformation of Nuance into a company with a tight focus on AI-driven voice recognition for healthcare and enterprises. A couple of unrelated divisions (automotive, document imaging) have been spun off. Nuance developed a variety of speech recognition and documentation products for the medical industry that have been very successful, dominating the market in 2021 for medical charting and radiology. Dragon combines a hyper-focused medical vocabulary with AI analysis in the cloud; the result is unparalleled accuracy for physicians.

Nuance’s other primary business today is cloud-based voice recognition for enterprises, used by employees as well as call centers and answering systems.

But the company discovered years ago that selling Windows programs to individual consumers is a pain in the ass. We’re cheap and needy and we don’t upgrade programs often enough to be profitable. You can still buy a copy of Dragon in a box with a microphone, just like we bought at Best Buy fifteen years ago, but Dragon’s dictation programs for consumers are a legacy on their last legs.

Microsoft has been looking for ways into the healthcare industry for many years, so Nuance is a natural fit. Microsoft will capitalize on Nuance’s relationships with electronic health record providers and healthcare companies, and integrate its cloud systems and AI expertise into Nuance’s products (or vice versa). It looks like a good deal for both sides.

There is little reason for Microsoft to spend time or energy on the legacy dictation programs that you or I might use. Microsoft has long since accepted that the consumer market belongs to Apple and Google, who have built very effective voice recognition into iOS and Android.

But let’s imagine a happy ending to the Microsoft/Nuance marriage for consumers and small businesses.

Microsoft has built voice recognition into Word for years. See the “Dictate” button on the right side of the Word ribbon? It’s been there all along but you don’t use it because it’s pretty weak. The word recognition isn’t bad but there are some pretty serious shortcomings in the controls. Dragon users can easily capitalize and correct mistakes and do a variety of other things that the Microsoft dictation software can’t handle.

So imagine that Microsoft integrates the Nuance technology into the Office programs, improving the voice recognition in Word and Outlook without Dragon’s dated interface and heavy memory use. Wouldn’t that be swell?

That might be a pipe-dream. Microsoft promised lots of synchronicity and integration when it acquired LinkedIn five years ago and virtually none of it has come to fruition. Still, we can hope, right?

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There is nothing new about mergers and acquisitions as a business strategy. It’s been part of the business landscape for centuries. But there is something special about the way the strategy has been used and abused in the late 20th century. Instead of being a technique to expand into new markets or gain expertise, acquisitions began to be used – particularly in the tech industry – to dominate a product line by eating all the competitors instead of, you know, competing with them.

Nuance’s entry in Wikipedia is hilarious – or from another perspective it’s a particularly extreme example of a kind of sickness that has afflicted American business.

If you’re plugged into the tech industry, you may have known that Nuance Communications was the owner of the Dragon line of programs. If you’re really plugged into the tech industry, you may have heard that Nuance supplied the technology that Apple used initially to power Siri, although Apple has been developing Siri independently for the last few years without Nuance’s help.

But there is so much more both before and after those years!

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Forgive me – the next section will be a bit of a blur for many of you. I want to go through it, though, because some of the names will be familiar to tech enthusiasts from the early days.

Let’s start with Scansoft. Remember Scansoft? Its origins go back to 1974, when Raymond Kurzweil founded Kurzeil Computer Products, acquired by Xerox in 1980 and renamed Xerox Imaging Systems, later renamed again to Scansoft. Back in the 1990s you might have used Scansoft programs like TextBridge and OmniPage for primitive scanning and OCR.

Then there was the Visioneer Papermax flatbed scanner. I had one back in the pre-Internet days of the early 1990s. I wrestled with the Paperport software for managing scans for years – a good idea at the heart of a very badly written program. Ah, Paperport! I wrote this in 2011, ten years after Visioneer and Scansoft merged and eventually took the name Nuance:

“For almost a decade Scansoft/Nuance earned a reputation in my heart as the worst company in the world. Oh, sure, at times Network Solutions or AT&T would earn special recognition for boneheaded offensive evil stupidity, but Nuance was always in the running because of what it had done with a perfectly nice document organizer named Paperport.”

(Paperport still exists! Who knew?)

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Let’s take a side trip. Lernout & Hauspie was an early tech company focused on speech recognition. It went on an acquisition binge in the late 1990s, buying Dictaphone (which could trace its origins literally back to Alexander Graham Bell) and a few other familiar names. Lernout & Hauspie also bought a company named Dragon Systems, which was selling a program named Dragon Naturally Speaking.

It turns out the management of Lernout & Hauspie had been defrauding the company for years, so shortly after those acquisitions in 2001, the company went bankrupt and a few months later Scansoft bought all the speech recognition technology and programs, including Dragon.

Scansoft then acquired Nuance Communications in 2005 and adopted the Nuance name.

And that odd sequence of mergers and acquisitions is why Nuance Communications has equaled Dragon voice recognition for more than fifteen years.

You think that’s a tangled web? That’s just the warmup. Oh, the fun that Nuance has had since then.

Over the next twelve years, Nuance bought more than fifty companies. Each acquisition was presumably accompanied by a press release about synergy and growth and corporate strength, but this looks more like the shopping spree of a bored collector during the pandemic. Look at this list!

Isn’t that amazing?

Some of the names are vaguely familiar. Early on Nuance bought more of the remains of Dictaphone that emerged from the Lernout & Hauspie bankruptcy. Nuance bought speech technology patents from IBM. It bought MacSpeech, popular voice recognition software for Mac OS X in the mid-2000s. For some reason it bought the company that made the Swype keyboard for phones. It bought Equitrac, which did enterprise print management software.

Most of the names, though are unfamiliar. I wouldn’t have guessed there were more than fifty companies working on anything remotely related to speech recognition over the years, but those are just the ones that are gone now after Nuance took them off the table.

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Nuance spent more than five billion dollars on acquisitions between 2000 and 2018. During that time its revenue grew from $50 million to $1.8 billion dollars. Other than revenue, most of its business markers were lackluster at best – profits, margin, and return on invested capital were seldom more than blah. The focus on healthcare and subscription revenue from cloud services apparently was a successful pivot by the new CEO because it drew Microsoft’s attention for a huge buyout.

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For almost twenty years, Nuance was the big fish eating lots and lots of little fish. Perhaps there is something poetic about the Microsoft whale coming along to swallow Nuance up. There is, however, one bit of continuity that is hard for me to overlook: during that entire time, Dragon dictation software for Windows has had a dated interface and has caused frustration for almost everyone who uses it. And in an ever-changing world, I suspect that will never change.