Classroom Teacher

Using Dragon NaturallySpeaking with Windows Live Writer

If you follow this blog, then you know that I use Dragon NaturallySpeaking to write blog posts on this site.

[stextbox id=”info”] (By the way, Dragon NaturallySpeaking is on sale right now – and if you’re thinking about buying Home or Premium, you have until March 17, 2012 at midnight to save $80 on Dragon NaturallySpeaking 11.5 )[/stextbox]

This post is part of a 3-post series on looking for a better way to blog by using Dragon NaturallySpeaking.

  1. First, we looked at how you can blog quicker with voice recognition software (and why I used DragonPad when I use Dragon NaturallySpeaking.)
  2. Then, we talked about whether there was a difference between how accurate Dragon NaturallySpeaking transcribed your words in different web browsers or programs.
  3. Today, we’ll be looking at using Dragon NaturallySpeaking with Windows Live Writer to write your blog posts.

What is Windows Live Writer?

Windows Live Writer is a free download from Microsoft. It’s part of the Windows Live Essentials suite that you can download here – (Think Windows Live Messenger – aka MSN but for blogging. You can choose which programs to install from the suite.)

The nice thing about Windows Live Writer is that it gives you an easy way to write posts on your WordPress, Blogger, or TypePad site.

Benefits to using Dragon NaturallySpeaking with Windows Live Writer to write your blog posts.

1. You can add rich text formatting (i.e. bold, italics, bullets) and links to other webpages directly in your blog post draft as you write it.

I used to use DragonPad which is a rich text editor in Dragon NaturallySpeaking. I would dictate my blog posts, and then copy and paste the text into my WordPress blog. Then I would go through and add the formatting and hyperlinks in WordPress on my web browser.

2. Windows Live Writer is smart enough to be able to figure out the formatting on your blog so you can draft your post and what you see is what you get (WYSIWYG).

When I set up the connection between Windows Live Writer and my WordPress blog, it asked me if I want to temporarily publish a post in order for it to pick up my blog [HTML] styles. I’m glad I did.

I’m writing this blog post right now, and everything I dictate into Windows Live Writer looks exactly the way it will when I publish the post.

3. Windows Live Writer has document auto recovery

The problem with dictating your blog posts using DragonPad is that DragonPad doesn’t have document auto save or document auto recovery.

Windows Live Writer 2011 has document auto recovery. This means that if Windows Live Writer doesn’t shut down properly, I get a little message asking me to recover changes. (Older versions of Windows Live Writer had timed autosave, which meant that your work would get saved every X number of minutes, but it also meant that once your work was saved, you couldn’t revert back any mistakes (CTRL-Z.)

4. Windows Live Writer lets you write your blog posts, preview what it will look like live on your blog, as well as view the source code for your post.

At the bottom of Windows Live Writer, you have three tabs that let you choose how to view your post (before you publish it to the world or save a draft on your blog.)

  1. The (default) edit view is nice because it lets you see what you’re typing using the same formatting and page width as when you eventually publish your work. What you see is what you get.
  2. The preview view is great because it shows you what your blog post will look like in your blog’s theme. (This preview works off-line as well because you downloaded your theme in the initial set up. If you need to update the theme for your blog, read this FAQ.)
  3. Finally, the source preview is good because you can see exactly what HTML code is getting sent to your blog. I like this because back in the day, when you copy and pasted text from your Microsoft Word document to your WordPress blog, there used to be a bunch of style codes that came along for the ride. Now, you can see that’s pretty much simple plain basic HTML that’s getting posted on your site.

The only complaint I have about the three different views in Windows Live Writer is that when you switch between different views, it doesn’t remember what part of the page you’re looking at.

For example, if you’re working on a section halfway down your post, it would’ve been nice if Windows Live Writer would jump to the exact same section when you switch between the edit view, the preview view, and the source view.

Problems with using Dragon NaturallySpeaking with Windows Live Writer

1. You can’t undo things you said if you’re using Dragon NaturallySpeaking in Windows Live Writer.

Oh sure, you can use CTRL-Z to undo regular mistakes that you make when you’re typing with Windows Live Writer, but if you use Dragon NaturallySpeaking to dictate into the program, for whatever reason, CTRL-Z doesn’t undo any changes made by Dragon NaturallySpeaking.

You need to say the Dragon NaturallySpeaking command “scratch that” to undo the change in Dragon NaturallySpeaking.

2. Some of the Dragon NaturallySpeaking commands don’t work the way I would expect them to in Windows Live Writer.

The Dragon NaturallySpeaking command “bullet that” doesn’t seem to work in Windows Live Writer which makes me wonder about other commands.

3. When you give the Dragon NaturallySpeaking command “new paragraph”, it seems to work by adding two lines breaks instead of an enter key.

When you look at the source code, Dragon NaturallySpeaking is adding to break codes <br> instead of a paragraph code <p>. Why does this matter?

  1. Well, in some cases, this can make a difference in the layout of your site depending on your CSS formatting: your styling for <br> may be different from <p>
  2. If you’re writing paragraphs in Microsoft Word, Dragon NaturallySpeaking automatically enters a blank line between your paragraphs. (You may not want that extra space.)
  3. From a blogger’s perspective, if you’re writing a longer essay with many paragraphs and you’re using the “new paragraph” command, then Windows Live Writer considers this all one paragraph (broken up into chunks using line breaks.)This means when you click on a paragraph to become a bullet, the entire essay becomes one bullet (because Windows Live Writer sees the entire essay as one paragraph.) Annoying.

4. Dragon NaturallySpeaking might misunderstand you and accidentally publish your work before you’re ready

Dragon NaturallySpeaking accidentally published my work because I said the word, “publish”

5. Windows Live Writer doesn’t truly sync with your blog.

You can get two options to open files in Windows Live Writer:

Here are the two problems with this set up.

Problem #1: You can’t edit any posts that didn’t start in Windows Live Writer. (If you write a post by logging into your blog, it won’t show up in Windows Live Writer as a recent post.)

Problem #2: Windows Live Writer only downloads any changes in the post from your blog when you click on Open Recent Posts. Here’s how you might accidentally overwrite changes you make on your site:

  1. You write a blog post on your computer using Dragon NaturallySpeaking in Windows Live Writer.
  2. As you work, you post draft to your blog to save your draft online.
  3. When you finish, you hit the publish button, or you tell Dragon NaturallySpeaking to “publish”, and all of a sudden, your post is live to the world. (The nice part about this is you’ve already set up access to your blog so when you hit the publish button, you don’t need to sign in again. Very magical.)
  4. Now let’s say, you make a few minor changes by logging into your WordPress blog online.

6. There can be a glitch if your blog post has a table and you’re using Dragon NaturallySpeaking

I can’t track it down, but every now and then Dragon NaturallySpeaking doesn’t work correctly when you’re writing a blog post with certain types of formatting.

Things definitely go wonky when you have a table inserted into your blog post, but I’m pretty sure other types of HTML formatting messed things up as well.

For example, right now, I’m writing this post using Dragon NaturallySpeaking in Windows Live Writer. Everything was working great, until I inserted a table.

This post on Windows Live Writer and Dragon NaturallySpeaking is part of a longer essay (3-part series) on finding a better way to blog with Dragon NaturallySpeaking.

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