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<> wrote:
> "Mark Conrad" wrote:
>
>> I doubt if WSR has any practical uses for the "average user",
>> but it certainly is fun to play with.
>
> If you consider yourself an average user, then you’re absolutely
> correct. However, as I’ve pointed out many times before, WSR
> (Windows Speech Recognition) was designed specifically with the
> business vocabulary and for people with disabilities to have
> easier access to using the computer. I’m not sure why you ignore
> these, " facts."
<> wrote:
> "Mark Conrad" wrote:
>
>> I doubt if WSR has any practical uses for the "average user",
>> but it certainly is fun to play with.
>
> If you consider yourself an average user, then you’re absolutely
> correct. However, as I’ve pointed out many times before, WSR
> (Windows Speech Recognition) was designed specifically with the
> business vocabulary and for people with disabilities to have
> easier access to using the computer. I’m not sure why you ignore
> these, " facts."
Maybe because they are not facts, Spammer. Windows Speech
Recognition was designed specifically for "casual users". That
fact is straight from the lead Microsoft programmer.
