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Apple Dictation Is Fine. Until You Try to Use It for Real Work.

Apple Dictation Is Fine. Until You Try to Use It for Real Work.

via Dev.toOndrej Machala

Apple Dictation is fine for short bursts. A quick text. A search query. A one-sentence reminder. For those, it works. But try dictating a long email, a paragraph of notes, or anything with technical terms, and you'll hit its limits fast. Word substitutions. Missed words at sentence boundaries. Foreign names garbled beyond recognition. It's not that Apple Dictation is bad. It's that modern open-source speech recognition has gotten significantly better — and Apple's built-in option hasn't kept up. So I built an alternative. The Problem With Apple Dictation Apple Dictation is free and built-in. Those are its best features. Everything else is a compromise: Quality : Apple's on-device model lags behind modern open-source alternatives significantly. The best open-source speech recognition models were trained on hundreds of thousands of hours of audio across dozens of languages. Apple's model is optimized for power efficiency on-device — not accuracy. Context loss : Apple Dictation doesn't pe

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