![]() ![]() I use Magix’s Sound Forge Audio Studio 15 (a castoff of Sony’s) to process the recording first to increase audio peak heights as my Sony ICD-PX470 recorder hooked up to a Sony ECM-R300 table mic with noise cancellation turned on doesn’t produce a very strong signal. I’ve uploaded up to 75 minutes of audio at one time (~90 Mb) but the transcription service can be painfully slow at times, so I usually split the audio into 30 min segments to do one-by-one. ![]() The amount of time left in the 300 minutes allowance for a month usually shows up when you first fire up the voice transcription feature to upload an. So, what goes in comes out in the transcription. I use a Blue Yeti X microphone, was "coerced" into clearly enunciating the King’s English growing up, and my voice is pretty accurately transcribed. Someone uses a laptop microphone and slurs his very casual speech-not so great a result. The same speakers attend all our Zoom meetings, and the degree of voice recognition hasn’t improved in ~the past half year. To really make it a must-have service, Microsoft ought to make the AI backend learn from one’s edits over time. Just like a comma in the wrong place can be disastrous, a single bad word choice can make for an embarrassing transcription, too – so careful checking is essential!!! The transcription service also shows no signs of learning from one’s corrections. Basically, what you have to deal with was summed up years ago by a famous little book on punctuation and grammar, Eats, Shoots & Leaves, by Lynne Truss. So, to make a readable text, one has to go through and decide whether one needs to remove those periods and capitals to make one smooth, logical bit of speech. The transcription also breaks any speaker’s continuous utterances down into shorter phrases and puts a period at the end of each phrase, capitalizing the beginning of the next phrase, even though the whole set of utterances might be part of one sentence. But it sometimes screws up in identification and may include the beginning or end of one person’s utterance as belonging to the previous speaker’s or next speaker’s transcription snippet. It does a pretty good job of identifying different speakers. How well it works really depends on the clarity of the audio and any speaker’s style, as is true for voice recognition in general. I’ve been using it since January this year to transcribe the recorded audio from neighborhood Board meetings as Board Secretary. And there is a monthly limit of 300 minutes that I don’t see documented anywhere my wife hits that almost every month and so she’ll send me the recorded Zoom files so I can transcribe them for her. There are a few limitations with this feature: it requires a Microsoft 365 subscription, as noted. This can be done with just the text, with the speakers labeled, with timestamps, or with speakers and timestamps. And you can replay the audio in the Transcribe pane, and it will indicate the location in the transcription as you skip around.įrom here, you can add the transcription to the new document. You can edit the names of the speakers if you’d like. When it’s done, the transcription will appear in the Transcribe pane. The time each operation takes will be based on the size/length of the recording. Word for the web will need to upload the file first they’re stored in a Transcribed Files folder that will appear in the root of OneDrive and can be deleted later.Īnd then it will be transcribed. ![]() I use Upload audio to transcribe audio and (despite the name) video files. ![]() There are two basic choices here: Upload audio and Start recording. When you click that, the Transcribe pane opens. Then, in the simplified ribbon, find the drop-down control next to the Dictate icon (which looks like a microphone). To transcribe an audio or video file, open Word on the web ( > Word in a web browser) and create a new, blank document. If there’s a “Show transcript” option, you’re good to go. Side-tip: to see if a YouTube video offers a transcription, click the “…” link at the end of the line of icons below the video’s title and description. This is a Microsoft 365 feature that my wife uses regularly for the Zoom-based interviews she performs each week, and I’ve used it recently to transcribe Microsoft event videos for which YouTube doesn’t have transcriptions. Word for the web offers a useful feature not found in the desktop version: it can transcribe the speech in audio and video files. ![]()
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