Ikea
Posted: Fri Jul 30, 2021 10:39 pm
Hi guys anybody know what junction on the motorway
to get off for ikea thanks
Vic
to get off for ikea thanks
Vic
I have been using voice recognition since about 1990, mainly because of difficulty with typing. I started off with the IBM "Simply Speaking" which was the pioneer system; you had to dictate each word separately with a few milliseconds pause between them and I had it in both English and French. I would guess that it was about 1993 that IBM managed continuous speech, up to about eight words at a time. This worked fine because many people think, when dictating, in terms of 2 to 6 words. If I remember correctly, the latest versions came on 38 3 1/2 inch diskettes. In the mid-1990s, IBM decided that speech recognition was not one of their core businesses and they sold it to a company that went phut within a year or two. At about that time, another company whose name escapes me for the moment came on the market with a certain amount of success but they got embroiled with IBM over intellectual property rights and, out of the ashes, Dragon was born. I think this must have been in the mid-1990s. Although I was still using the IBM system, I switched to Dragon in the hopes of future upgrading. I am still using it (version 15.61). This irrelevant post has nothing whatsoever to do with IKEA except, perhaps, the way the name IKEA is pronounced. Dragon prefers the correct pronunciation of the short I but also accepts the British pronunciation with the long I. This medium length paragraph took me about five minutes to dictate, including a couple of corrections, but it would have taken me at least an hour to have typed it on the keyboard: if you think five minutes is too long, remember that my brain is not as astute as it used to be!Happy in Cyprus wrote: ↑Sat Jul 31, 2021 5:15 pm Voice recognition is heaps better than it was one or two decades ago, but sometimes gets it wrong.
(Wiki)Waze (Hebrew: ווייז, /weɪz/; formerly FreeMap Israel) is a GPS navigation software app and a subsidiary of Google. It works on smartphones and tablet computers that have GPS support. It provides turn-by-turn navigation information and user-submitted travel times and route details, while downloading location-dependent information over a mobile telephone network. Waze describes its app as a community-driven GPS navigation app, which is free to download and use.
No trev it doesn't need wifi, i just put the address in limassol, left my place in larnaca and it took me there and back without any internet,