Networked digital dictation developer WinScribe of Auckland, New Zealand, will exhibit WinScribe 3.6, released last month.
WinScribe offers voice-to-document features, incorporating digital dictation, transcription, speech recognition, and workflow management, the company said.
Version 3.6 delivers a range of new and adapted features, including compatibility with a wider range of peripheral devices, allowing greater choices for handheld recorders, microphones, and other peripherals, and preserving existing equipment investments, according to the firm.
In addition, WinScribe 3.6 supports Voice Over Internet Protocol (VOIP), providing the capability to make VOIP or Internet telephony calls directly to the WinScribe server, dictate directly to the WinScribe system, and bypass the need for recorders or other transcription equipment, often eliminating standard network call charges, according to WinScribe.
The developer has also implemented new server-side recognition software, allowing customers to shift speech recognition processing from the desktop or portable client to a central server. By allowing the central server to perform the work, users increase the turnaround time for their reports, and the central-server configuration reduces the need for high-specification client workstation computers, WinScribe said.
The vendor said it has also improved password protection and added new author interface options, as well as a new Web up-loader that allows authors to upload dictations from a standard Internet browser.
The HL7-compliant application is available now, and the developer said it provides a 24-hour, 7-day technical help desk as backup to its worldwide sales partner channel.
By Jonathan S. Batchelor
AuntMinnie.com staff writer
November 18, 2005
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