Thursday, June 13, 2024

Voice Typing in Google Docs and MS 365

 


woman with headset



Have you ever wished you could just talk and get your brainstorm-y ideas down on paper? 

You can...with voice typing!


Voice Typing in Google Docs

Watch the video below to see how easy it is to use voice typing in Google Docs!

NOTE: This now works in all browsers, in addition to Chrome.



Voice typing in Word (Microsoft 365 only)

Word has two options for converting audio to text: Dictate and Transcribe

Dictate

This is the "classic" voice to text.  

From the home menu in Word, click Dictate.

You will see a microphone waiting for you to record.  Start talking and you will see your words appear on the page.  Click the microphone icon to toggle between recording and pausing.

One tip: you will want to say the punctuation you want included.  

Once you are done recording, you can edit the text as you would with any document.

Transcribe

There are two ways to use transcribe: (1) you can record an audio file with one or more people in Word and transcribe that file or have a link to the audio file pasted into the document. (2) What I think is more common, you can upload an audio file and get a transcript. Here is how that works:

From the home menu in Word, find the Dictate/Voice block, click the down pointing arrow, and select Transcribe.

A transcribe sidebar opens. Select your language if it is not US English. You can Start Recording or Upload Audio.  We are going to Upload Audio.

Navigate to your audio file and open it. Word gives you a message that it is transcribing. 

When it it ready, it will display the transcription in the sidebar. You can use this as a reference when you are typing, or add some/all of the transcription to the document.


How can you, (or others) use voice typing to improve your learning and productivity?





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