Three, where I used the service’s Android-app to dictate to my phone while walking around the house. This removed the strange feedback loop of seeing the text emerge while talking, but had me sitting behind my laptop and manually uploading a file afterwards. Two, where I recorded myself talking using QuickTime and uploaded the resulting sound file. It’s like using a mirror to guide your hand movements, but then for speech. This worked well, but creates odd feedback loops of self-consciousness when I read back my own words while speaking them. One, where I spoke to my laptop, while seeing the transcription written out live in front of me. Despite, or maybe because of, the friction I feel using audio, I decided to try it out now. Indeed, my 1Password contained a login that I created in March 2018, but never used. Taking a look at the Otter.ai website I tried to create an account, only to be told that the unique email address I entered was already tied to an existing account. In a tweet Mike Haber mentioned Otter.ai, a spoken text transcription tool, in the context of making notes (in Obsidian.md).
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