
Dragon works best (a) to capture masses of voice to convert to text and (b) to fill in structured reports, “Patient X presented with …” I mainly use it for my operation reports and notes in Genie.”Īnd he obliquely hit on the key to good use – order and structure. “I still use a secretary for much of the typing, but I also use Dragon Medical. I asked him about Dragon Medical edition. It seems PowerMic 3 addresses every issue I had.” I bought a Phillips SpeechMike that at the time was better than the PowerMic 2 and was recommended by one of Dragon's resellers. In part that is because PowerMic 3 is an improvement over PowerMic 2 – or so a medical user I consulted (not on Medicare’s watch) said, “I recommend spending a few hundred dollars on a proper microphone. Hurdle one over – it very accurately converts voice to text! My point is that as a writer I use the PC screen as my creative tableau and I am not yet used to the discipline of speech, ordering my thoughts to produce a coherent review.

It is so easy to blabber and see the words appear as text in a Word Document – masses of words! I spoke and it instantly turned voice into text without errors – every um, ah, ha, wait, go back, delete …

After a short test to get to know my voice the results were impressive. Let’s start with the obvious – turning voice into text.

So, I did – I added a week of additional use before this review.
#Program power mic 3 for mac software#
I must apologise to Nuance Australia for that introduction – its software is so comprehensive and so powerful that I should have taken the time to learn more.
