Google's Chrome 11 Browser Can Hear You | Internet News

Google’s Chrome 11 Browser Can Hear You

Mar 23, 2011
1 minute read


Netstat -vat by Sean Michael Kerner (bio)

A command line view of IT

Can you hear me now?

Not content to let Mozilla developers have their day in the sun with the big Firefox 4 release, Google has upped the ante in the browser wars with Chrome 11 Beta.

While many of the recent Chrome releases have primarily focused on performance gains, Chrome 11 offers users a feature that none of us have ever seen built into a browser before.

Chrome 11 supports the HTML5 speech input API. That’s right, speech input – the keyboard isn’t the only way to get data into your browser anymore.

“With this API, developers can give web apps the ability to transcribe your voice to text,” Satish Sampath, Software Engineer at Google wrote in a blog post. “When a web page uses this feature, you simply click on an icon and then speak into your computer’s microphone. The recorded audio is sent to speech servers for transcription, after which the text is typed out for you.”

The potential for this technology is staggering.


[Continue reading this blog post at Netstat -vat by Sean Michael Kerner]

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