Attach leg to table using screw #jb4 in the socket furthest from the leg facing northwest.

This is Speech Tech senior editor Len Klie’s first post on our blog. Be nice to him. Welcome to the interwebs, Len.
New Jersey-based speech technology vendor iVoice only a few months ago received a U.S. patent for a methodology to make “Talking Consumer Products with Voice Instructions via Wireless Technology.” The company is moving quickly, as today it announced that it has already contracted with a DVD production company to assist with the marketing of the technology.
Jerry Mahoney, CEO of iVoice, says that the company’s invention lets users of new products to activate a speaking package that will take the place of a manual when putting together products. No more mangled hands and bruised ego (or is that bruised hands and mangled ego?) as I simultaneously struggle with trying to hold a half-assembled wooden “guillotine” together with one hand and thumbing through the mini-tome to find out what wrench I’ll need to more permanently connect the pieces with the other. Invariably, that one sentence will appear on page 39 of the 160-page instructions booklet buried deep at the bottom of the box.
The hands-free, eyes-free instructions will make product assembly safer and quicker, but still might not fix my damaged psyche. It will also be a welcome endeavor if it means I no longer have to download and print hundreds of pages of PDF files to learn how to sync my new digital camera to my laptop.
[What we would like to see: A speech recognition component that translates our yelling, anger, and frustration with assembling furniture, and says, "Next time, pay someone else to put this together." -- Ed.]
