Phillip Smith

phillipadsmith / Phillip Smith

Phillip is the "Simplifier of Technology" at Community Bandwidth, a Canadian consulting practice that works with non-profits and social-mission organizations to explore the thoughtful use of technology toward creating a more just and sustainable society. You're currently reading entries from Phillip's blog on non-profit technology, social innovation, and independent media.

Ending the tyranny of voice mail

Okay, I admit it. I’m an inbox junkie. And, If I have to look in more than one electronic inbox, it drives me crazy. Historically, nothing drove me crazier than voice mail… it just refused to behave. So the journey began: first it was eliminating all but one voice mail box; then I began forwarding everything — business, mobile, and home — to that one (voicemail) inbox. But even that wasn’t enough — I still couldn’t manage to remember to dial in for the messages. I tried asking people to e-mail me instead of leaving a voice mail, but that was short-lived. Then I hit on the magic dust: a voice mail transcription service.

It all started with an exploration of Jott. Jott is a service that provides “mobile note taking” — basically, I could call Jott and it would transcribe what I was saying and send it to me, or to you, or to anybody that was in my address book. So, for example, I could call in and say “Hey Mark, I’m going to be late for coffee,” and then tell Jott to send it to Mark. I kind of liked the idea of mobile note taking — just think: I could send notes to my inbox! — but the reality was that I didn’t use it.

Then I stumbled on Simulscribe. It was like Jott, only in reverse.

Basically, when someone calls me I forward that call (when it’s not answered) to Simulscribe. Simulscribe takes the call, records it to a digital audio file, transcribes it, and then sends it to me. And, for extra points, it can even send the transcribed message as an SMS to my mobile phone. How cool is that?

Now, in reality, that’s not quite how I have things set up. In fact, our phone system at the Centre for Social Innovation was already set up to send me voice mail as an audio file. The audio file, however, wasn’t much use when I was on the road and trying to access my e-mail from my Blackberry … so I simply forward that file to Simulscribe and they do the rest.

Don’t believe me? Here’s a quick example:

Hi there. People are always asking about how I do this. So, I thought (Of a?) really quick example. Basically, a year or so ago I signed up for Simulscribe. Probably one of the most fantastic services that I’ve ever signed up for. And it has made my life dealing with voicemail an absolute treat. So there you have it an example of how Simulscribe works and how great the quality of the transcription is. And (I’m?) probably gonna make it into a blog post right about now.

And here’s the audio file. (Be sure to read the transcribed text above while listening.)

I can’t tell you how much I enjoy replying to voice mail via e-mail. Talk about being e-mail-centric. ;-)

The funny thing is, when I signed up for Jott, I took efforts to determine how they did the transcription. Jott used to be very upfront about this — they simply send the audio file somewhere to be manually transcribed. I thought that was quite ingenious, but not 100% cool in my books. So, when I signed up for Simulscribe, I was a bit anxious to find out how their service worked.

However, according to their site: “SimulScribe utilizes cutting-edge voice recognition technology to convert your voicemail messages into text.”

Funny thing is, the transcription takes about 10 minutes (the same as Jott), and the occasional spelling error makes me wonder…

Anyway, for all intents and purposes, Simulscribe has saved my life. Sign up and free yourself from the tyranny of voice mail.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on November 13, 2007 - 6:51pm.

> Funny thing is, the transcription takes about 10 minutes
> (the same as Jott), and the occasional spelling error
> makes me wonder…

I don't know, man - looks to me like someone is listening
to your message and transcribing it manually. How else to
explain the fact that you clearly said

'... how good the quality of the transcription is'

and it was transcribed as

'...how great the quality of the transcription is'

Hmm...

Paul N.

phillipadsmith's picture
Submitted by phillipadsmith on November 14, 2007 - 11:32am.

I don’t know, man - looks to me like someone is listening to your message and transcribing it manually.

Yep. I’ve had my doubts too. Hopefully someone with a bit more time will investigate further and let me know. Until then, I’m just hoping it’s not a transcription sweatshop!

Phillip.


Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on May 27, 2008 - 10:09am.

At 1st i did not really believe that it is transcribe by a system but as one of my tech friend told me. yes it is possible. So i asked him if there is a program or stuff that could do that and he said yes. But the problem is that it wont transcribe it very accurate but similar to what's the tone and how you say it. it can even be corrected, you know the grammar and stuff. well i did try leaving a voice mail with a wrong grammar to this phone tag thing and i was satisfied. well even if the grammar is still wrong but words that i did not say clearly was transcribe nearest to its pronouncement. I think its a machine because if its transcribe manually well they must know what I mean in the message and corrected it. well its not..

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