

#DRAGON MEDICAL ONE REVIEWS PC#
SayIt works seamlessly with both Mac and PC and has the smartphone microphone option as well. The MAC limitation can be a major drawback for physicians who use either a Mac in their daily practice or when working from home. Flexibility on this front is a key consideration for today's voice recognition users.ĭragon Medical One is not Mac-compatible, but functions on a PC or desktop and has the option to turn a smartphone into a wireless microphone. With physicians under increasingly strict time constraints, being able to dictate on virtually any device can be a real time-saver. Again, that functionality is included in SayIt's base price, while it is an add-on expense with Dragon Medical One. Plus, SayIt works well with Citrix and other virtualized desktop environments. The option to use your smartphone as a microphone is included in that price - no additional fees for this convenient, time-saving feature.

There is an additional $20 fee per provider for using a smartphone as a wireless mic. To break down the costs even more, Dragon charges $123 per month per provider. We've shared this chart before, but it's a fantastic visual to help you understand the difference between the two platforms in terms of total cost of ownership.īy switching from Dragon to SayIt, you can reduce your voice recognition expenses by nearly 50 percent! Extrapolate that over years or decades, and the savings can have a substantial impact on your bottom line. This is an area where, hands down, SayIt trumps Dragon. Cost of Ownershipįixed operational costs are some of the most difficult for healthcare organizations and physician practices to reduce.

Here's how SayIt voice recognition trumps Dragon Medical One. But SayIt, a cloud-based platform by nVoq, is changing all of that. Nuance's Dragon Medical line (Dragon Medical One is their cloud-based solution) has often been an industry frontrunner. With users beginning to identify all of the associated benefits, cloud-based speech solutions have also emerged as viable options for physicians too. The voice recognition market has been growing steadily and is projected to reach nearly $128 billion by 2024.
