With the current state of technology, you’re likely using your voice with a lot of your other devices. You talk to Siri on your iPhone, to Google Assistant on your Google Nest speaker, or to Alexa on your Echo Show display. However, most people forget (or don’t know) that they can use their voice with their Windows computer, too.
With Windows 11, voice access allows users to control their computers without physically touching their keyboard or mouse. You can use it to interact with your active windows, open new apps, dictate and edit text, and mimic keyboard and mouse actions (i.e., do a “left click” or “press Enter” using your voice). It’s almost similar to the previously released Windows Speech Recognition (WSR), but this time, you don’t need to train your PC to recognize your voice. Just enable voice access and start speaking your commands. To turn it on, head to Settings > Accessibility > Speech.
As of this writing, voice access is only available in the English language, unlike WSR which can also understand Japanese, Mandarin, French, Spanish, and German.
Stay connected with us on social media platform for instant update click here to join our Twitter, & Facebook
We are now on Telegram. Click here to join our channel (@TechiUpdate) and stay updated with the latest Technology headlines.
For all the latest Gaming News Click Here