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Why Talking is Better Than Typing

  • April 7, 2012 12:32 am

Repetitive stress injury or RSI is the term used to describe pain suffered from undertaking a repetitive physical task on a daily basis – like typing. The hands become increasingly painful over time as the fingers and thumbs repeatedly strike keys. The mouth on the other hand seems to be free from affliction no matter how much talking a person does. At least I have never heard of RSI of the mouth although I have heard people speak so much that you would think that the jaw would demand respite through either pain or fatigue.

Seriously, RSI is an excruciating experience. Another afflicted writer describes his RSI experience in the guardian like this,

“My neck is crooked, one of my wrists feels like it has been trapped in a car door and there’s a rapidly calcifying knot of nastiness lurking around my right shoulder blade that caused a masseuse to laugh with sadistic delight, and which goes by the name of The Nub. This is the price one pays for hammering a keyboard like Jerry Lee Lewis all day, every day for 15 years.” Ben Myers’ words will resonate with many writers. more...

TranscribeMe: A Sister is Born

  • April 2, 2012 2:53 pm

It was Startup Weekend Auckland, September 2011, when a group of individuals met around a concept. One team took the top prize and left the weekend walking on air and ready to race forward. They are the founders of crowd sourcing, transcription company, TranscribeMe. John Graves was part of this team that converts voice to text but he also has his own vision and so treads a different post Startup Weekend path.

Fast forward six months and the voice to text team are still together, grown and concept validated. TranscribeMe has been developed to Beta stage and is receiving international acclaim. John Graves has followed his own path to complete that service circle (voice-to-text/text-to-voice) as the founder and inventor of SlideSpeech. SlideSpeech converts text to voice. Two outstanding concepts born from one amazing weekend – related in many ways and yet different. This is what innovation is all about. more...

Bite Writers write in Bits and Bytes

  • March 29, 2012 10:22 am

The sound bite is the medium used to send content to the crowd of Bite Writers who convert bites to bits and bytes – or in other words, audio to digital text.

This is an exciting new concept in crowd sourcing, it will revolutionize the hybrid computer/human crowd model and it is unique to TranscribeMe. We do not call our crowd ‘transcribers’, we call them Bite Writers and we do that because this crowd is not at home on their computers with their foot pedals. They may not even be on their laptops. Bite writers work from anywhere and everywhere using any number of digital devices and not always the same ones. They do not fit the traditional demographic profile of the mid-aged, female, transcriber although TranscribeMe will retain that pool as well. Bite Writers are the early adopter workforce who are comfortable with technology and open to a new way of doing business. more...

Crowdsourcing Words: Hiring Others to Write

  • March 26, 2012 6:57 pm

It is nothing new. Alexandre Dumas crowd sourced the writing of his greatest work in the 1800s, The Count of Monte Cristo. It’s true! Some say that he had up to eighty ghost writers who worked on his novels. In fact there was a joke circulating at the time that went something along the lines of,

Alexandre Dumas says to his son, “Son, have you read my latest novel?” To which his son replies, “No dad, have you?” more...

Benefits of Hands-Free Communication

  • March 23, 2012 10:41 pm

I was sitting at home once, doing nothing – a rare event – I switched on the telly and there was an episode of Ellen DeGeneres. She had a mock-up of a hands free device, showing how its not just hands-free driving that a person can gain. She showed juggling babies, pots and pets. It was rather hilarious – if not quite true. It is true however, that technological inventions are doing much to make life easier. Transcription software is one such innovation that is on the rise. Not quite perfect – yet – it is already a handy tool for many a busy person to use. more...

An Aid for English Language Learners

  • March 21, 2012 10:31 pm

I had done the bookwork, I knew a reasonable amount of the grammar, my vocabulary was on the rise, I thought — I can do this! I hopped off the plane, got off the gate at the other side — and….. Hang on a minute…what? I barely understood a word of what was going on around me. The airport announcements flew in one ear and out the other without taking hold.

After two weeks in France, things improved enough to hold a basic conversation. But being in Paris was much like listening to a radio that was sitting nicely in between two frequencies. What was being said to me —I understood — everything else was faint buzzing….My French teacher told me it would take a good 3 months to tune in properly with the French. more...

The Basics of Transcription Service

  • 10:27 pm

From time to time it pays to step back and look at the fundamentals of what you do and why. For transcription service providers, the answers for what and why may be complex and that is especially true if the transcription services cross professional fields, and it’s compounded again if transcribers are crowd sourced. Nonetheless, the self-review process is an important one for those who provide transcription services.

Obviously, transcription services cater for those who require conversion of voice data to text data – that is transcription service at its most elementary level. The reasons to engage a transcription service are many and most commonly are for archival purposes, sharing, storage and publication. As such, the numbers of professionals who use transcription services are many and varied but not limited to those looking for the above solutions alone. For individuals who must regularly address an audience the imperative of a transcription service is even greater and indeed, quite different. more...

Opening up the world of hearing

  • March 19, 2012 9:58 am

She ran in the headlines for several weeks.

Firstly it was the good news.

New Zealand has its first profoundly deaf MP in Parliament. Welcome Mojo Mathers.
But wait there was a catch. The headlines had a field day. New Zealand’s first profoundly deaf MP has been told parliament will not pay for the technology she needs to fully participate in parliamentary debate.
Why? more...

TranscribeMe Pitch at DEMO Asia 2012

  • March 13, 2012 2:21 am

I’m Alexei from TranscribeMe and I’m really excited to be the first company presenting at the inaugural DEMO Conference here in Singapore. Let me begin by asking you a question. How many of you have been to similar events where you wanted to remember every word or wish that you could share it with your friends but couldn’t? Well here at DEMO.Asia TranscribeMe have got you covered. Over the next two days we will record and transcribe every minute of every pitch for you that you will hear on the stage and will make it available as pitch perfect text. This is our magic. more...

Time to Change Time (With Transcription!)

  • March 10, 2012 3:22 pm

With Transcription!

We have over time, tried. We have attempted to change time, or reorganize it at least, to accommodate our changing lifestyles. The four-day work week has been a dream of forward thinking nations for decades now. In another effort to adjust time (so we aren’t all doing the same thing at the same time, namely sitting in traffic) we have bravely attempted to stagger working hours so that we are heading to our work places at 7, 8, 9 and 10am and returning to our homes in 8 hours later respective of the time we started. more...