mike_intellivision said:
Microsoft fake a presentation ... never. /sarcasm. (Microsoft invented "smoke and mirrors" demos). Any recognition software with which I have ever worked has required "training" the software to recognize the speaker's voice (or person's hand writing). The issue becomes whether or not the average Kinect user will be able to have their comments recognized. By limited, I meant a small vocabulary or a small set of languages recognized. Remember, this is not a product for one country or specialized places. In Europe, it would have to recognize English, French, Spanish, Portuguese, Spanish, German, Dutch, etc. So that will not be a small task -- and could explain the confusion over voice recognition on what will be implemented and what will not be. If you expect Kinect to be fully fluent in every language at launch, ...
Mike from Morgantown |
You've never called a company and had to use voice commands to navigate the automated messages? Did it require training to understand you?
There is a big difference between having to have the computer type exact words that you are speaking and the computer only needing to understand the gist of what you're saying. Many of the demos that were shown that allowed full sentence communication, such as Milo, were not only using your words but also the tonality of your voice to gauge what you were trying to say. As far as I know there were no demos shown using complete sentences where ever word needed to be recognized.
I don't expect it being fluent in every language at all, I thought you were talking about it being limited even in English.







