Wednesday, January 6, 2010

What is the difference between the $100 one and the $600 one (Part 2)?

...And because I completely failed to answer my own question, here is part 2. I have given you a guide to what a digital 'notetaker' is - an affordable, fairly rudimentary type of recorder that records in MP3 and is not suitable for transcription.
'Pro Dictation' is something else altogether. Many people realise this after they have bought a $100 note-taker. The typical user of this device is the managing partner of a law firm. Ensconced in leather and mahogany, he or she is rather adept at dictating edicts, letters, directives. Their time is very expensive, so it makes sense for someone else to do the typing.

This person’s device of choice will be something like the Philips Digital Pocket Memo 9500. Philips along with Olympus and Grundig together created the DSS file format (along with Grundig, a German manufacturer) that has become the industry-standard.

The five main rules of a pro dictation:
1. For the greatest ease-of-use (and this is what pro dictation is all about, isn’t it?), buy a recorder with a slide-control (see the Digital Pocket Memo 9500 below).

These recorders are around $150-$200 cheaper but the trade-off is an interface that is perhaps less intuitive.

2. The recorder will come with software. This software is similar in layout to Microsoft Outlook (folders on the left, inbox to the right, menus and settings long the top- show print screen). This software enables the author to manage his or her dictation files and send the completed dictations to the typist for transcription. You will also need transcription software for the typist; this looks almost exactly the same as the author’s and comes with a headset and foot-control.





3. You talk, they type. This remains the golden rule for pro dictation: the recorders are used by professionals with support staff at their disposal. Speech recognition has developed a foothold in the pro dictation market and the Philips SpeechExec software is compatible with Dragon Naturally Speaking, the biggest player in the field. Downloaded dictations can be converted to text with a click of the icon below.




Pocket Memo 488 (tape) Digital Pocket Memo 9500





Speech-to-Text option in Philips SpeechExec
4. Digital recorders are like tape recorders: ergonomically they are very similar as both use a slide control. Tape is understandably chunkier and a little low-tech compared to digital.

Unlike a note-taker, the controls for play/stop/rewind/fast-forward are on the side, meaning the ‘author’ only has to use his or her thumb to control most functions. Some more affordable recorders use buttons instead, such as the Digital Pocket Memo 9370 (below).

5. Pro recorders use DSS (except Sony).





As mentioned earlier, the DSS file format has become the default standard for pro dictation. DSS files are much smaller than mp3 (DSS is 5-6MB/hr vs. 28MB for high quality MP3) as the format is only useful for recording voice. It’s fairly useless for recording a band practice, or bird song or the slow rhythmic tumbling of waves in the Coromandel.
And whereas MP3 (the file format of Philips digital notetakers) can be played back using any media player, DSS files can only be opened with the dedicated dictation software.


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