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posted by LaminatorX on Thursday April 17 2014, @01:27PM   Printer-friendly
from the Tell-us-how-you-really-feel dept.

from AlterNet

If you want a vision of the future, imagine a wage slave typing: "I hate my job. I hate my job. I hate my job," on a keyboard, for ever. That's what a Manhattan court typist is accused of doing, having been fired from his post two years ago, after jeopardizing upwards of 30 trials, according to the New York Post. Many of the court transcripts were "complete gibberish" as the stenographer was allegedly suffering the effects of alcohol abuse, but the one that has caught public attention contains the phrase "I hate my job" over and over again.

We've collectively been around the professional block many times. What's the most spectacular flameout you've seen?

 
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  • (Score: 5, Informative) by frojack on Thursday April 17 2014, @06:20PM

    by frojack (1554) on Thursday April 17 2014, @06:20PM (#32775) Journal

    Why they even bother any more in this age of cheap recording devices, I have no idea.

    In most US courts there is a audio recording as well as the steno.
    But the audio recording can't be quickly "read back" when a lawyer requests it hearing what a previous witness said before lunch break. The tape will contain coughs and footsteps and all sorts of noise (sometimes covering the testimony), that the stenographer (usually seated close to the witness) isn't bothered by. The steno will indicate who said what, the tape often can't distinguish one voice from another, or a viewer's gallery remark.

    Stenographers have an un-spoken signal system with the Judge (quick turn of the head, tap of the earlobe) to prompt for in-ability to hear, and the judge will ask the speaker to speak up or repeat something. The tape on the other hand, can go for hours with a defective recording heads and nobody might notice it.

    Also the Steno software now days comes with computer aided software that allows the capability to quickly convert the shorthand to text, with a minimal amount of human intervention. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stenotype [wikipedia.org]

    Only in some minor proceedings will you ever see Tape recordings as the only recording method, and even in those cases there is usually still a person (still called a stenographer) who is listening to a playback via a second set of tape heads to make sure the record is audible. This doesn't save much because it still has to be transcribed.

    There are also voice stenography technology [cjonline.com] coming into play in some places.

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  • (Score: 2) by Maow on Thursday April 17 2014, @07:21PM

    by Maow (8) on Thursday April 17 2014, @07:21PM (#32800) Homepage

    Thanks - highly informative.

    I still think it might be worthwhile to have a pair of audio recordings, taken from different locations, as backups to the sometimes-fallible stenographer.

  • (Score: 2) by Grishnakh on Friday April 18 2014, @12:45AM

    by Grishnakh (2831) on Friday April 18 2014, @12:45AM (#32911)

    Very informative, but as the other responder said, it seems like they could do better. Our recording technology is pretty good these days and it should be possible to use multiple microphones and DSP processing to isolate what people say. Have mikes at the judge's desk, the witness stand, the defense and prosecution desks, etc., and it should be pretty easy to see who said what. With good software control, it should be possible to make an easy-to-use GUI that lets you select a mike, go back in time, and play what that mike heard (with other noises filtered out).