Hi.
I've been reading and searching this forum for some days. I am thinking of buying VC.
However, there is one thing I'm still confused: the supported languages. I need Portuguese language (PT-PT) and it is not a supported language.
VC uses the windows speech API, right? Windows 7 only comes with a handfull of supported languages but... don't you just need to download your own language set?
Aren't these the files I am talking about?:
http://www.microsoft.com/en-us/download/details.aspx?id=27224
http://www.microsoft.com/pt-pt/mldc/downloads.aspx
Will these be enough to use VC in those languages? Or am I missing something?
Thanks.
Regards,
Mike
Hi Mike, I understand your confusion but those links are for the microsoft speech platform, not for SAPI which is what VC uses. Here is a page that describes some of the key differences between the two.
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/jj127858.aspxIf we were to switch to the speech platform we would gain the additional languages but would have to give up a lot of other things such as:
- ability to train
- use of 8 bit audio instead of 16bit
- no more ability to use dictation.
the first two points may or may not be important issues, but the third one is a pretty big deal. And of course there would be the matter of all the work involved in recoding to the other platform.
We are hoping that Windows 8 will support more languages using Sapi. Currently Vista and Windows 7 support only English, French, Spanish, German, Chinese and Japanese.
You can of course do what Wanilton does and use the English engine but still create commands in Portuguese. The advantage of this is that if you speak a bit of English, you will get much better results when requesting media with all those English titles and Artist names.
I hope this clarifies some issues for you, and does not add to the confusion. You can test everything using the free demo mode, there are no limitations, so try it out and only buy the license once you've decided if it is going to work for you.
Good luck, and feel free to come back with more questions.