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March 12th, 2007

Microsoft's speech aspirations fulfilled?

Posted by Dan Farber @ 5:59 pm

Categories: General, Microsoft

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Microsoft and Bill Gates have been in pursuit of speech technologies for a long time, and news.com is reporting that it may end up buying Tellme Networks for a pretty price (the company has received $230 million in funding so far and is profitable).

Speech input has been the next big interface thing from Microsoft for at least a decade, but few mainstream users are giving speech commands to their Windows computers, telling it to "open file," "close window" or take a letter. According to GigaOm, Microsoft may pay $800 million or more for Tellme's speech technology.

It turns out the big application for speech is on the telephony and Internet communications front, from call centers to cell phones. Tellme claims 35 million unique callers per month, over 10 billion utterances per year, over 2 billion calls per year, the world's largest recorded audio library and a carrier-grade network for its VoiceXML platform traffic. The company also says that it accounts for 40 percent of 411 traffic in the U.S.

You have to wonder about the effectiveness of all the money Microsoft has spent on speech technology R&D over the years if the company ends up acquiring Tellme for hundreds of millions.

Of course, Microsoft is not lacking in cash for such transactions, and views this kind of technology as core to its mobile and communications aspirations, and its Speech Server business. Microsoft's  speech products group is centered around its speech recognition software for Vista and Speech Server for handling speech-enabled telephony and speech-enabled applications.  

In 1998, Microsoft hired top speech recognition technologist Kai Fu Lee, and was a founder of Microsoft Research Asia, and then lost him to Google in a much publicized battle in 2005.

Microsoft Research has speech tech teams in Redmond and Beijing working on spoken language technologies with a vision of the "fully speech-enabled computer." Check out the marketing flash demo explaining Microsoft speech recognition ambitions and research activities, which focus on continuous free flowing speech and ways to obtain cleaner signals for computing input in public places by sensing vibrations in skin.

More from Techcrunch and WSJ ($)

Dan Farber, editor-in-chief of CNET News.com, has more than 20 years of experience as an editor and journalist covering technology. See his full profile and disclosure of his industry affiliations.

  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 6 Talkback(s)
1990s no different from today
Back then lots of people thought they would soon solve the continuous speech recognition problem "real soon", even though AI research had consistently demonstrated how difficult a problem it is. I wou... (Read the rest)
Posted by: jorwell Posted on: 03/14/07 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
I find the enthusiasm baffling  jorwell | 03/13/07
You've totaly missed the concept  Heatlesssun1 | 03/13/07
Your head is firmly planted  rhomp2002@... | 03/13/07
Yes, useful for the disabled  jorwell | 03/14/07
1990s thinking...  jonathon_haworth@... | 03/14/07
1990s no different from today  jorwell | 03/14/07

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