Speech Recognition eventually slows down, then turns itself off

bachware

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I have Win 7 SP1 (not my desktop in the specs below, but an ASUS U50F laptop, x64 2.13GHz Intel Core i3 CPU, 4GB RAM). I'm deaf, so use it, after training it at home, to transcribe speech at church via the PA and Comtek, audio levels set not to go into the red. To begin with it works fine, but gradually slows down, with SR (sapisvr.exe) lagging farther and farther behind speech until the lag becomes 10' - 15', when the SR orb auto-switches to "Off". Sometimes I can jog it back on with the {Ctrl} + {Win} hotkey (have it set not to respond to "stop listening" audio), but after a while it refuses to respond to the start-listening key, and puts up a DB that says "Speech Recognition has encountered an error...", to shut it down and restart it, whereupon it again works for a short while, but eventually posts the same error after an even shorter usage time. Finally I have to coldstart, but the phenomenon eventually recurs in the same pattern: Simply logging off the profile and back on doesn't solve it.

It looks to me as if SR is using up resources, like a buffer and suffering memory starvation. I have it set to start at logon, so looked in the usual Registry place to find where sapisrv was being started, hoping to find a way of starting it in Realtime priority from there so it'd get favoritism in resource usage, but couldn't get it to work (can't reset priority after it starts manually via TM, which says "Access is denied"). Ideally there should be a technical advanced subsystem for SR that allows a user to tell the OS how much resources it can use, what priority it should get, etc. I'm a tech, but couldn't find any Registry settings for giving SR more RAM. Ideas/suggestions?
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
tower: self-made; laptop: ASUS U50f
OS
Tower: 7 Pro; Laptop: Win 7x64/Win10x64 multiboot
CPU
Intel: tower i7, laptop i3
Motherboard
tower: ASUS B85M-E, Via chipset; ASUS U50f notebook
Memory
both 4Gb DDR3
Graphics Card(s)
Intel Graphics 4600 series; ASUS U50f Intel graphics
Sound Card
Microsoft hi-d audio; laptop OEM
Monitor(s) Displays
Dell 2709W; laptop: OEM
Screen Resolution
1900x1200 TruColor, landscape
Hard Drives
Tower: Samsung SSD
Laptop: Hitachi IDE
PSU
300W
Case
Generic
Cooling
CPU fan, chassis in- and exhaust fans
Keyboard
Logitech Illuminated USB
Mouse
Microsoft USB mouse
Internet Speed
100Mb+ fiber-optic
Antivirus
Microsoft Security Essentials/Win 7 firewall
Browser
Firefox 46, MSIE 11, Opera
I'm not a SR tech but have you checked to see what else is running on your laptop? Many OEM PCs have boatloads of "Bloatware" that start up and run in the background. Some AV programs can also be a burden on the system. Microsoft Security Essentials (MSE) is fast and integrates well with Windows (I wouldn't expect less). Another option is to increase the size of the pagefile and/or add more memory.
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Built 2/11/2011
OS
Windows 7 Pro-x64
CPU
i7-2600 3.4GHz - 3.8GHz Turbo
Motherboard
Intel DH67BL-B3
Memory
8Gb - 2x4GB, Muskin 991770 PC3-1333
Graphics Card(s)
Integrated Intel HD 2000
Sound Card
Integrated Intel 10.1 HD, RealTek ALC892
Monitor(s) Displays
Asus LCD VH222H, Haier HL24XSL2a
Screen Resolution
1920x1080, 1920x1080
Hard Drives
Crucial SSD C300-128Gb,
Western Digital WD5002AALX - 500Gb,
Western Digital WD7501AALS - 750Gb
PSU
Seasonic 650W 80+ Gold Modular
Case
Rosewill Defender
Cooling
Stock CPU, Four 120mm case fans, PCH fan added
Keyboard
Logitech EX100 Y-RBH94 Wireless
Mouse
Logitech EX100 M-RCE95 Wireless
Internet Speed
3.0/1.5 Mbs
Antivirus
Microsoft Security Essentials
Browser
Microsoft Internet Explorer 11
Other Info
Antec Veris Premier-Multimedia IR Station,
Cyber Accoustics-3602 Speakers,
AFT XM-5U Card Reader,
Hauppauge TV-HVR-2250,
Sony LX300 USB Turntable
I suggest a portable digital voice recorder (like the ones reporters use) that saves the recording as a file and has a USB connector to later transfer the file to a PC then run software to convert it to text, rather than do this 'ON THE FLY'.

I am no expert on sound recordings to text, but I assume the software is basically just doing that, anyway, and ON THE FLY recording/conversion I could see causing these issues.

This doesn't help if you wanted it RIGHT NOW of course.

I have a recorder made by Olympus that saves it as a file with USB, was about $50. and uses 1 AAA.
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Self Built Custom
OS
Windows 7 Ultimate Retail Box (64-bit installed) + Service Pack 1
CPU
AMD FX-8350 CPU v1.15 (or 1.0F) BIOS was required!
Motherboard
MSI 890FXA-GD70
Memory
8G CAS-7 G-Skill DDR3 @1333 (2 fours) [mobo nonOC max rec'd]
Graphics Card(s)
Radeon HD 7950 [3 gigs of GDDR5] MSI Twin Frozr model
Sound Card
Realtek High Definition Audio (onboard mobo, ALC-889 chip)
Monitor(s) Displays
2 WS LED Monitors: One LG One Viewsonic
Screen Resolution
1920 by 1080
Hard Drives
SSD for OS: Samsung 840 Pro
SSD for VM and utilities: Adata SX900
7200 RPM SATA HDs for the rest: Hitachi and Seagate
PSU
Corsair TX850 - 850W max, in service since August 2010.
Case
Thermaltake Armor A90
Cooling
Thermaltake Spin Q CPU Cooler, in service since August 2010
Keyboard
Logitech G11
Mouse
Logitech M310 Wireless
Internet Speed
100 Megabit broadband supposedly upgraded from 50 (Cable)
Antivirus
Bitdefender Internet Security 2014 suite
Browser
Pale Moon 64-bit main, also IceDragon, Opera, and Maxthon.
Other Info
CompTIA A+ certified (220-800 series) in July 2013.
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