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Nuance Updates Dragon Dictation for Mac With 24% Accuracy Boost, New Batch Mode

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nuance_dragon_logoVoice dictation company Nuance today announced a collection of new software upgrades, including Dragon Professional Individual (version 15), Dragon Legal Individual (version 15), and Dragon Professional Individual for Mac (version 6). As with all versions of Nuance's software, the new updates are said to feature "powerful dictation, transcription and customization capabilities" to allow users helpful and responsive dictation features with an emphasis on workflow.

The Dragon software lets its users precisely dictate reports, spreadsheets, emails, and other documentation using only their voice. Specifically on the new Mac release, the software has had its accuracy boosted up to 24 percent over previous iterations of Dragon. Helpful tips will get new users "up to speed quickly," while further educating existing Dragon fans into the complexities of Nuance's product.

“This latest suite of professional productivity solutions brings with it some of the most advanced capabilities to drive documentation productivity – with higher accuracy, speed and efficiency,” said Peter Mahoney, senior vice president and general manager of Dragon. “Combined with Dragon’s optimization for portable touchscreen PC’s and the ability to sync with Dragon Anywhere, professionals are able to keep up with documentation demands from just about anywhere their business takes them.”

In the new update, Nuance has introduced a "Batch Mode" to allow users to transcribe multiple audio files at once, as well as introducing full text control to empower "users to work even more quickly and accurately by voice." Using Apple's accessibility API, Dragon Professional Individual for Mac supports Apple Pages, Apple Keynote, Apple Numbers, Microsoft Outlook 2016, Scrivener, and other document creation programs.

The release on the Mac -- as well as Dragon on the PC -- uses Nuance's new "Deep Learning Technology" to learn each of its users' voice patterns and accents. This allows Dragon to recognize and adapt to the environment, be it in a quiet office or outside, which is a possibility thanks to the company's Dragon Anywhere mobile app that launched late last year. Over time, this speech data is accrued to improve Dragon's voice dictation features and result in a more naturalistic readout of transcribed speech.

The English version of Dragon Professional Individual for Mac will go on sale for $300 on September 1 (digital) and September 14 (retail) in the United States, United Kingdom and Australia. Nuance is also holding a special upgrade pricing scheme, selling Dragon for $150 for users who own registered versions of Dragon Dictate for Mac, versions 4 and higher. Those interested in the other Dragon software bundles can find out more about Dragon Professional Individual for PC and Dragon Legal Individual on Nuance's official website.

Tags: Dragon, Nuance

Top Rated Comments

127 months ago
That's grape to here!
Score: 10 Votes (Like | Disagree)
S.B.G Avatar
127 months ago
I have a friend who uses and swears by Dragon dictation as its enabled him to write reports more effectively after a spinal injury and only has limited use of his hands. To be fair, he used the software prior to the accident he had and loved it back then too.

A 24% boost in accuracy is quite good too, nothing to sneeze at there.
Score: 4 Votes (Like | Disagree)
127 months ago
While I acknowledge the software is OK, I dumped it a while ago. Every time there is a new update they go into crazy obscene price gouging mode (lots of hate for these guys on MacUpdate for this very reason). Despite what the marketing says for the new version, the performance improvements quoted never seem to be that noticeable and you effectively pay for a lot of new bugs that take eons to resolve.
Score: 3 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Marzzz Avatar
127 months ago
The Medical versions of Dragon can save you a lot of money on dictation even if the up front cost makes some smaller practices cringe.
Admittedly, the upfront cost of Dragon Dictate Medical was barely 2-3 weeks of the cost of professional transcription services, but the software itself is a huge battle to use, and there is ZERO support from the company. I have been using it for years, but with each "upgrade" there are new performance problems, bugs, and other issues.
Score: 3 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Phoenixx Avatar
127 months ago
Dragon on the Mac has to be one of the worst pieces of software out there. It's so bad, the average user is better off buying the Windows version and installing that under Parallels or Bootcamp. That's exactly what I did.

And this nonsense about a 24% increase in accuracy is outright BS. The program is already 99% accurate, so to increase it by 24% is actually only a fraction of a percent in difference. That's so small the average user won't even notice. The far bigger limitation is not the software, but the microphone that is used. In real world terms, you will increase the accuracy far more by buying a top grade mike. Personally, I use a specially modified Sennheiser ME 3, and get great results and that's on version 13.
Score: 2 Votes (Like | Disagree)
127 months ago
It has been a long time since I've used desktop dictation, but my impression was that it had reached 95 to 97% accuracy level about 10 years ago. How could it possibly be 24% better than that?
Those old accuracy estimates were, shall we say, very generous (i.e., not accurate). I've heard from a family member who has used dictation software regularly since the 1990s that major gains in accuracy have happened in the past couple years, however. It's recently been good enough to use for general writing (but still not more than 95% accurate).

How the math works for improved accuracy (assuming 95% accurate before) is probably like this: ((1-0.95)*0.24)+0.95 = 0.962. So a jump from 95% to 96.2% accuracy can be marketed as 24% better.
Score: 2 Votes (Like | Disagree)

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