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by hluska
2875 days ago
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There are quite a few options. I am not deaf, but I did quite a bit of damage when I was young and stupid. Of these, I've only tried Dragon Dictation as I'm too stubborn/embarrassed to try other options or get hearing aids. - Ava - Ava sounds good and it used to be called Trancense. I'll try this one first once I get over my stupid shit - https://www.ava.me - Dragon dictation is really helpful in meetings. - Speaksee is raising money right now, but if it works as well as advertised, it would be a dream. I have more trouble hearing on my phone than in person (unless there's lots of background noise) - https://www.speak-see.com - I'd like to try Texthear, but I'm an iOS user and their pricing model on iOS ($0.30 a minute sold in 30 minute blocks) is fucking insane. The download comes with 30 seconds preloaded, but that's not much to test it on the speakers I have the most trouble with. The Android app is free. https://texthear.com One thing to note is that for many of these technologies, the quality of your mic is important. Another thing to note is that they're not particularly discrete. If they're like me, they might find that the speech to text problem is easier to solve than the stigma of using one. |
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Phone calls - try RogerVoice app to have them transcribed for you. It's pretty easy but not free.
Ava - we focus on any in-person discussions, including meetings. The trick with group conversations is the cross-talk, and people speaking fast/casually. We developed over the last 3 years an AI that eliminates these issues to make it work exactly for this situation. Others will need to download the app (Ava), but it's free to join a host, and hosts get 5 hours every month to try the app 100% free.
Regarding the embarrassing situation of having to ask others, I see this a lot - that's really normal. First, know that you can use Ava by itself with your phone, a bit like a "talking stick". It can look like you're checking your phone when you are actually checking what the person actually said if what you heard. Just hold your phone within 1-2 meters from the speaker.
If you have a Bluetooth microphones, those make Ava really awesome: you can find an earpiece or a clip on (we recommend a few here: www.ava.me/store) so you can follow presentations/meetings when one person speak for a long time and is hard to lip read. Airpods or such work too, and of course wired microphones (for lunch for example).
For more situations, I really encourage you to read our FAQ: http://help.ava.me - we list like 95% of daily situations a deaf/hard-of-hearing person finds themselves into and how Ava can help there.
PS: feel free to give us any feedback on this, we're all ears & eyes :)
-thibault