Dictation

Dictation is built into the Mac. You can speak to type.

In fact, Mountain Lion’s dictation feature is identical to the iPhone/iPad’s. It lets you speak to enter text anywhere, into any program—email, novels, anything. (Behind the scenes, it’s using the same Nuance technology that powers Dragon Dictate.)

Now, before you get all excited, here are the necessary footnotes:

  • Voice typing works only when you have an Internet connection. (The audio of each utterance is transferred to servers online, which convert it into text and send it back to your screen.)

  • Voice typing works best if there’s not a lot of background noise. It works even better on Macs that have dual microphones, like the 15-inch MacBook Pro with Retina display; those two mikes create a “beam array”—a directional alignment that helps them differentiate your voice from the background noise.

  • Voice typing isn’t always practical; everybody nearby can hear what you’re doing.

  • Very often, you’ll have to correct an error or two.

All right—expectations set? Then here’s how to type by speaking.

Dictation Step by Step

First, fire up some program where you can type. TextEdit, Mail, Word, whatever. Dictation works in any program.

Now tap the Fn key twice. (You can also choose the Start Dictation command, which magically appears in almost every program’s Edit menu. Or you can choose a different keystroke, as described below.)

Note

The first time you trigger dictation, you’re warned that the Mac will send the names in your Contacts app to Apple, so that you’ll be able to say things like “Dear Mr. Szvredyk” and get a correct transcription. If that prospect unnerves you—if you think that it means that some Apple or Nuance employee will wind up reading the list of names in your personal Rolodex—then you shouldn’t proceed.

See the tiny microphone button that appears next to the insertion point (Figure 5-3, top)? When it appears, you hear a single xylophone note. Say what you have to say. You don’t have to speak slowly, loudly, or weirdly; speak normally.

The Mac has a built-in “speak to type” feature.Top: When you double-press the Fn key, the Mac goes into listening mode. The bouncing glow of the microphone icon is your level meter. It lets you know that the Mac hears you.If you haven’t released the Fn key or clicked Done (or pressed Enter) after 30 seconds, the Mac stops listening on its own. 30 seconds is the maximum talking time per blurt.Bottom: If you see the dashed underline, right-click it. You get a pop-up menu that includes alternative transcriptions.

Figure 5-3. The Mac has a built-in “speak to type” feature. Top: When you double-press the Fn key, the Mac goes into listening mode. The bouncing glow of the microphone icon is your level meter. It lets you know that the Mac hears you. If you haven’t released the Fn key or clicked Done (or pressed Enter) after 30 seconds, the Mac stops listening on its own. 30 seconds is the maximum talking time per blurt. Bottom: If you see the dashed underline, right-click it. You get a pop-up menu that includes alternative transcriptions.

You have to speak your own punctuation, like this: “Dear Dad (colon): Please send money (dash)—as much as you can (comma), please (period).” The table at the end of this section describes all the punctuation symbols you can dictate.

After you finish speaking, click Done or press Enter.

Tip

Here’s a shortcut. You can also hold down the Fn key on the second tap; do your speaking; and then release the key when you’re done. In other words, you can use it like a push-to-talk button on a walkie-talkie. That saves you the final press of the Enter key.

The Mac plays another xylophone note—higher, this time—and transmits the audio data to distant computers. They analyze your speech and transmit the resulting typed-out text back to your screen. (During this time, three blinking purple dots occupy the text area where you dictated. You can click Cancel if you’re getting impatient.) The transcribed text appears all at once, in a big blob.

If the transcription contains errors, you can click to edit them, exactly as you would fix an error in something you typed. Better yet, if the Mac knows it made errors, it underlines them, and you can often fix them with a quick click (Figure 5-3, bottom). Or, if the whole thing is a mess, you can press ⌘-Z, the universal keystroke for Undo.

Usually, you’ll find the accuracy pretty darned good, considering you didn’t have to train the software to recognize your voice. You’ll also find that the accuracy is better when you dictate complete sentences, and long words fare better than short ones.

Punctuation

Here’s a handy table that shows you what punctuation you can say, and how to say it.

Say this:

To get this:

For example, saying this:

Types this:

 

“period” or “full stop”

. [space and capital letter afterward]

“Best (period) date (period) ever (period)”

Best. Date. Ever.

 

“dot” or “point”

. [no space afterward]

“My email is frank (dot) smith (at sign) gmail (dot) com”

My email is

 

“comma,” “semicolon,” “colon”

, ; :

“Mom (comma) hear me (colon) I’m dizzy (semicolon) tired”

Mom, hear me: I’m dizzy; tired

 

“question mark,” “exclamation point”

? ! [space and capital letter afterward]

“Ellen (question mark) Hi (exclamation point)”

Ellen? Hi!

 

“inverted question mark,” “inverted exclamation point”

¿ ¡

“(inverted question mark) Que paso (question mark)”

¿Que paso?

 

“ellipsis” or “dot dot dot”

“Just one (ellipsis) more (ellipsis) step (ellipsis)”

Just one… more… step…

 

“space bar”

[a space, especially when a hyphen would normally appear]

“He rode the merry (space bar) go (space bar) round”

He rode the merry go round

 

“open paren” then “close paren” (or “open bracket/close bracket,” or “open brace/close brace”)

( ) or [ ] or { }

“Then she (open paren) the doctor (close paren) gasped”

Then she (the doctor) gasped

 

“new line”

[a press of the Return key]

“milk (new line) bread (new line) Cheez Whiz”

milk

bread

Cheez Whiz

 

“new paragraph”

[two presses of the Return key]

“autumn leaves (new paragraph) softly falling”

autumn leaves

softly falling

“quote,” then “unquote”

“ ”

Her perfume screamed (quote) available (unquote)

Her perfume screamed “available”

 

“numeral”

[writes the following number as a digit instead spelling it out]

“Next week she turns (numeral) eight”

Next week she turns 8

 

“asterisk,” “plus sign,” “minus sign,” “equals sign”

*, +, –

“numeral eight (asterisk) two (plus sign) one (minus sign) three (equals sign) fourteen”

8*2+1–3=14

 

“ampersand,” “dash”

&, —

“Barry (ampersand) David (dash) the best (exclamation point)”

Barry & David—the best!

 

“hyphen”

- [without spaces]

“Don’t give me that holier (hyphen) than (hyphen) thou attitude”

Don’t give me that holier-than-thou attitude

 

“backquote”

“Back in (backquote) (numeral) fifty-two”

back in ’52

 

“smiley,” “frowny,” “winky” (or “smiley face,” “frowny face,” “winky face”)

:-) :-( ;-)

“I think you know where I’m going with this (winky face).”

I think you know where I’m going with this ;-)

 

You can also say “percent sign” (%), “at sign” (@), “dollar sign” ($), “cent sign”) (¢), “euro sign” (€), “yen sign” (¥), “pounds sterling sign” (£), “section sign” (§), “copyright sign” (©), “registered sign” (®), “trademark sign” (™), “greater-than sign” or “less-than sign” (> or <), “degree sign” (°), “caret” (^), “tilde” (~), “vertical bar” (l), and “pound sign” (#).

The software automatically capitalizes the first new word after a period, question mark, or exclamation point. But you can also force it to capitalize words you’re dictating by saying “cap” right before the word, like this: “Dear (cap) Mom, I’ve run away to join (cap) The (cap) Circus (comma), a nonprofit cooperative for runaway jugglers.”

Here’s another table—this one shows the other commands for capitalization, plus spacing and spelling commands.

Say this:

To get this:

For example, saying this:

Types this:

“cap” or “capital”

Capitalize the next word

“Give me the (cap) works”

Give me the Works

“caps on,” then “caps off”

Capitalize the first letter of every word

“Next week, (caps on) the new england chicken cooperative (caps off) will hire me”

Next week, The New England Chicken Cooperative will hire me

“all caps,” then “all caps off”

Capitalize everything

“So (all caps on) please please (all caps off) don’t tell anyone”

So PLEASE PLEASE don’t tell anyone

“all caps”

Type just the next word in all caps

“We (all caps) really don’t belong here”

We REALLY don’t belong here

“no caps”

Type the next word in lowercase

“see you in (no caps) Texas”

see you in texas

“no caps on,” then “no caps off”

Prevents any capital letters

“I’ll ask (no caps on) Santa Claus (no caps off)”

I’ll ask santa claus

“no space”

Runs the next two words together

“Try new mega (no space) berry flavor”

Try new megaberry flavor

“no space on,” then “no space off”

Eliminates all spaces

“(No space on) I can’t believe you ate all that (no space off) (comma) she said excitedly”

I can’t believe you ate all that, she said excitedly

[alphabet letters]

Types the letters out, though usually not very accurately.

“The stock symbol is A P P L”

The stock symbol is APPL

You don’t always have to dictate these formatting commands, by the way. The Mac automatically inserts hyphens into phone numbers (you say, “2125561000,” and it types “212-556-1000”); formats two-line street addresses without your having to say “New line” before the city; handles prices automatically (“six dollars and thirty-two cents” becomes “$6.32”). It formats dates and Web addresses well, too; you can even use the nerdy shortcut “dub-dub-dub” when you want the “www” part of a Web address.

The Mac recognizes email addresses, too, as long as you remember to say “at sign” at the right spot. You’d say, “harold (underscore) beanfield (at sign) gmail (dot) com” to get .

Speech Settings

In System Preferences→Speech→Dictation & Speech, you can fiddle with several settings:

  • On/Off. If you turn Dictation off, you can no longer dictate to type; the little microphone button won’t appear.

  • Shortcut. Here’s where you specify what key you want to double-tap in order to dictate. From this pop-up menu, you can choose the Fn key (on laptops) or the right or left ⌘ key—or you can choose Customize to make up any keystroke you want. The Shortcut box goes empty; press a key combination you prefer (Control-S, for example).

  • Language. What language and accent do you have? The options here include English in three accents—American, British, and Australian—plus German, Japanese, and French. Apple says it will add more languages over time.

  • About Dictation and Privacy. Here, you can read more about that business of your utterances and address-book names being transmitted to Apple.

Note

You can also issue spoken commands to your Mac—“Open Safari,” for example. In Mountain Lion, Apple has moved this PlainTalk feature to System Preferences→Accessibility. For details, see this chapter’s free online PDF appendix, “PlainTalk,” on this book’s “Missing CD” page at www.missingmanuals.com.

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