Nice. I've tried Dragon about a year ago and was very impressed by its voice recognition abilities.
Bear in mind, though, that dictating is a completely different beast from writing on a keyboard. My normal writing style is edit-as-you-go. When using Dragon I found myself constantly stopping and revising the sentence I had just dictated, which is pretty tricky if you're trying not to type! Dictating is a completely different approach to writing than typing on a computer, and I just didn't have the mindset for that kind of composition.
A better way (for me) was to use a dictation device to record myself and then transcribe it later. Not seeing the words on the screen made it easier to think of it more as "talking to someone" and less as "typing by voice", if that makes sense. I can talk fluently and communicate my ideas quite well by voice, but knowing that I'm dictating somehow puts the brakes on that and drops me into "typing mode".
In a way, I think this is a generational thing. 50 years ago, almost everyone in business dictated almost everything they wrote to a stenographer, because composition was so clunky that it required a sort of division of labor. (There were other reasons, too.)
In the modern world, many law firms still have a "culture of dictation": older partners dictate their correspondence and expect young lawyers to do likewise. Unfortunately, the young lawyers are so used to typing themselves, on computers, that they find it difficult to dictate. My fiancee is a member of the bar, and she's heard of younger lawyers who actually type up their memos and briefs in advance, and then "dictate" them to a stenographer to satisfy the wishes of the partners!
So keep in mind that dictation is a skill, a way of thinking on your feet, that must be learned over time. But with practice it can be a very effective method for getting ideas on paper!
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