Goodbye speech

Three years ago, when I moved to Redmond from Silicon Valley, I had no idea I would stay working on Speech Recognition technology for so long.  My previous life had been spent on TV, at Microsoft and earlier at WebTV Networks, where I helped develop and launch products for Japan, Europe, and the U.S.  Before that, I was at Apple Computer, in marketing for Apple Japan where I worked on lots of great products, many now long forgotten.  Nothing about my background was particularly focused on SR, although I've always loved languages for both humans and machines.  But the speech team here at Microsoft was so much fun that somehow I ended up staying much longer than I intended.

But recently a great opportunity opened up for me to get back to business and marketing, something I did for most of my career and a part of my life I have missed.  For all the great things about speech and product development, I didn't get to spend as much time with customers and real users as I used to, and I'm a believer that you need to spend face time with customers if you're going to stay in touch with the future, so I'm both sad and excited to say that as of this week I've switched teams within Microsoft, to work in marketing on some very cool new products being built inside Microsoft Research. The first generation has already been announced, so I'll have much more to say about that once I get up to speed.  Yes, it uses speech technology, among many other cool ideas. 

Today I put together a new blog for my new team, but I'll continue writing here for a more personal perspective so please don't go away.  Thanks again to everyone who has followed me on this blog for the past three years.  I can't wait to tell you more, and meanwhile, happy speaking!

Published 21 June 07 06:21 by sprague

Comments

# IanRae said on June 22, 2007 9:22 AM:

Thanks for some great blogging on speech.  You always seemed to find the most interesting articles about speech rec out on the web.  MSS has really grown from the early days when it was going to be for multimodal PDA apps.  Now its APIs are built into Vista and MSS is running on SIP.  

Good luck with ResponsePoint -- small office PBXs are a huge market.

# Marshall Harrison - "the gotspeech guy" said on June 22, 2007 5:18 PM:

Thanks for all you have done for MSS. It's been great knowing you and I wish you well in the new venture.

# sprague said on June 23, 2007 12:39 AM:

Aw shucks, guys, thanks for the kind words.  

Note that I do not intend to stop blogging about speech-related topics, and I'm of course remaining in close touch with the speech team. So stay tuned!

# Robert said on June 23, 2007 7:33 PM:

Yes, definitely keep posting about speech-related topics, especially what Microsoft has been working on. Your blog has been very helpful to me in keeping up with Microsoft's progress. Best of luck with the new projects, too!

# Richard Sprague WebLog said on October 31, 2007 4:42 PM:

Rob Chambers, the new GPM for my old group , is blogging about Macintosh speech recognition , asking

# Noticias externas said on October 31, 2007 5:09 PM:

Rob Chambers, the new GPM for my old group , is blogging about Macintosh speech recognition , asking

# Richard Sprague WebLog said on April 21, 2008 10:14 AM:

At work on Friday everyone was teasing me about the new posting by David Greenfield at ZDNet , which

# Richard Sprague WebLog said on April 27, 2008 4:30 PM:

I'm no longer in the SR group, but of course I still keep track of my friends there, and last week at

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