Applications
Nexiwave's High-Performance, High Accuracy speech indexing solution targets industries that produce very large amounts of media content. Traditionally, due to cost constraints, high accuracy speech indexing technology has not been feasible to those industries. Low accuracy phonetic based indexing has been dominant in those industries. For example, call recordings even for a small call center would have required hundreds of computers to proper index the audio.
Nexiwave offers these attractive differentiations:
- Very High Speed Processing: we are nearly a hundred times faster than traditional speech processing. The cost savings is directly realized.
- Very High Search Accuracy:Compared to the traditional dominant phonetic based indexing, which offers merely 10~40% search accuracy, Nexiwave's Speech Indexing service offers over 93% search accuracy.
Our Target Applications
Call Recording Providers and Call Center Analytic Solution Providers
Intensive search capability in call center recordings, not just based on metadata. High accuracy call center analytic applications.
Online Media Accumulators / Publishers
PodCast / VideoCast Sharing Services, Audio Recording application, Broadcast News services. Any of those providers could receive tens of thousands of media submissions everyday. How can we enable an interested user to really find what he/she was looking for in the vast amount of submissions?
Conference Call Providers
Every conference call solution provider offers call recording capability, but there is no capability to easily find information from recordings. When the recordings are ten hours or more, without an effective search tool, it is virtually impossible for any end user to extract any information. Listening through many hours of recording is very time consuming. We can enable conference call companies to offer value-added features that let the end-user to search in their recordings.
Online Education Content Providers
Every distance learning session is recorded, but how often do your students to actually use those recordings? Wouldn't it be beneficial from a productivity perspective, if students could do key word topic searches on audio or video files?
