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Reading Your Voicemail, with Callwave

I've mentioned before how much I like Callwave.  Well, time to increase that "likeability" measurement again!  Callwave has introduced a "visual text" system they call "vtxt" which automatically translates the spoken word to the written word.  And the kicker is, it actually works.

I recently was persuaded by Callwave to try their voicemail system in lieu of the iPhone's stock "visual voicemail" system.  I have to say, I can't believe I waited this long to do it.  By swapping Callwave in, I can now get a text message and email with the message someone leaves typed into the message!  Meaning, I can read my voicemail.  How good is it?  I decided to call myself and leave myself the following message, which Callwave then converted into text:

"(Vtxt) Hi, this is Daniel Odio. I am leaving this as a message on my voicemail, which might sound a little strange to you because you're probably reading this on my blog, but that's the beauty of CallWave's voice transcription service, which is an automated transcription service that they have created. CallWave service allows for speech to be transcribed into text, which is then sent to the user as a text message or as an email or both, and so you can read your voicemail, which is a very strange concept to most people. So, let me just repeat how it works. You can actually read your voicemail by - whenever somebody leaves a message on your voicemail, it then gets transcribed by callwave.com into text and that text is then sent to you via text message on your phone or to your email or both. It's a pretty neat service, and I found that the accuracy is generally very good. We'll see how it is once this gets transcribed into text. But generally, I find it to be very good. Let me go ahead and just give my number so that you can see how a number transcribed. It's 202-250-3846. And what I'm going to do is I'm going to copy this text message that I get into my blog and post it as a blog posting, which also raises a lot of other possibilities about posting audio, you know, in text form and not having to actually write everything out. So, enjoy it and check the tool out. I'm very impressed."

I've mentioned before how much I like Callwave.  Well, time to increase that "likeability" measurement again!  Callwave has introduced a "visual text" system they call "vtxt" which automatically translates the spoken word to the written word.  And the kicker is, it actually works. I recently was persuaded by Callwave to try their voicemail system in lieu of the iPhone's stock "visual voicemail" system.  I have to say, I can't believe I waited this long to do it.  By swapping Callwave in, I can now get a text message and email with the message someone leaves typed into the message!  Meaning, I can read my voicemail.  How good is it?  I decided to call myself and leave myself the following message, which Callwave then converted into text: "(Vtxt) Hi, this is Daniel Odio. I am leaving this as a message on my voicemail, which might sound a little strange to you because you're probably reading this on my blog, but that's the beauty of CallWave's voice transcription service, which is an automated transcription service that they have created. CallWave service allows for speech to be transcribed into text, which is then sent to the user as a text message or as an email or both, and so you can read your voicemail, which is a very strange concept to most people. So, let me just repeat how it works. You can actually read your voicemail by - whenever somebody leaves a message on your voicemail, it then gets transcribed by callwave.com into text and that text is then sent to you via text message on your phone or to your email or both. It's a pretty neat service, and I found that the accuracy is generally very good. We'll see how it is once this gets transcribed into text. But generally, I find it to be very good. Let me go ahead and just give my number so that you can see how a number transcribed. It's 202-250-3846. And what I'm going to do is I'm going to copy this text message that I get into my blog and post it as a blog posting, which also raises a lot of other possibilities about posting audio, you know, in text form and not having to actually write everything out. So, enjoy it and check the tool out. I'm very impressed."

Callwave is Amazing

One of my absolute favorite sayings is, "The future is already here - it's just unevenly distributed."  And that's absolutely true.  We all live in our own version of the "present".  Some of us still use notepads to jot notes, others of us use our PDA phones & then email ourselves the note we just took (yes that's me).

One of the most amazing (and free) tools I've started using recently is CallWave  (www.Callwave.com).  CallWave allows me to check my cell phone voicemail on my computer, which has resulted in me practically never checking VM from my phone anymore.  The CallWave system completely replaces the standard voicemail system.  You can still check VM the same way from your phone, but now your VMs will also arrive in your inbox via email (handy for forwarding).

Another amazing feature is that I can use a "Widget" to see what messages I currently have (see screenshot).  I use a Mac, but this is available for PC users too through Google's widget system.

One of my absolute favorite sayings is, "The future is already here - it's just unevenly distributed."  And that's absolutely true.  We all live in our own version of the "present".  Some of us still use notepads to jot notes, others of us use our PDA phones & then email ourselves the note we just took (yes that's me). One of the most amazing (and free) tools I've started using recently is CallWave  (www.Callwave.com).  CallWave allows me to check my cell phone voicemail on my computer, which has resulted in me practically never checking VM from my phone anymore.  The CallWave system completely replaces the standard voicemail system.  You can still check VM the same way from your phone, but now your VMs will also arrive in your inbox via email (handy for forwarding). Another amazing feature is that I can use a "Widget" to see what messages I currently have (see screenshot).  I use a Mac, but this is available for PC users too through Google's widget system.

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