Vlingo Corporation today debuted a new application for BlackBerry smartphones from Research In Motion (RIM) (Nasdaq: RIMM; TSX: RIM), offering the industry's first complete voice-powered interface based entirely on vlingo's breakthrough speech recognition technology. Available free-of-charge*, vlingo's BlackBerry application lets users send emails and text messages, search the Web, open applications (BlackBerry® Calendar, BlackBerry® Maps, etc.), dial their phones, look up contacts and even send notes to themselves - all with the power of voice. "Just a few months ago, vlingo was selected to voice-enable Yahoo! oneSearch™, which showed the world just how quick and easy mobile Web search can be with the power of voice," said Dave Grannan, CEO of vlingo. "Vlingo takes this technology beyond Web search into everyday applications that are now instantly more usable and easier to find because you only need to think about one button and a few spoken words. Vlingo believes that we can...
Vlingo Corporation today debuted a new application for BlackBerry smartphones from Research In Motion (RIM) (Nasdaq: RIMM; TSX: RIM), offering the industry's first complete voice-powered interface...
Vlingo Corporation today debuted a new application for BlackBerry smartphones from Research In Motion (RIM) (Nasdaq: RIMM; TSX: RIM), offering the industry's first complete voice-powered interface...
New Venture Backed by Charles River Ventures and Sigma Partners Unlocks Mobile Data Services with First-of-its-Kind Technology Vlingo Corporation launched today with a limited beta version of its...
Visit http://www.rcrnews.com for the latest in intelligence on all things wireless. Vlingo and speech-rec: Vlingo released a new, free application allowing BlackBerry owners to use voice to...
T-Mobile announced the release of the first Google Android Smartphone known as the HTC Dream in October. T-Mobile will ship 700,000 units by the end of this year the HTC Dream will compete directly...
FiReStarter company interview. With vlingo, instead of triple-tapping on a small keyboard, users can now simply speak to their mobile phones to enter search terms, addresses or any other text.