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Microsoft to buy speech-recognition firm Nuance for $16B: Report

Nuance merged with its competitor in the commercial large-scale speech application business, ScanSoft, in October 2005.

Microsoft to buy speech-recognition firm Nuance for $16B: Report

At $16 billion, Nuance would be Microsoft's second largest acquisition after LinkedIn that the company bought in 2016 for $27 billion. (Photo: AFP)

Microsoft is reportedly acquiring speech-recognition company Nuance Communications for nearly $16 billion and the deal could be announced on Monday (US time), the media reported.

According to a CNBC report citing sources on Sunday, Microsoft first approached Nuance in December last year.

At about $56 per share for Nuance, the acquisition value could be nearly $16 billion.

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At $16 billion, Nuance would be Microsoft’s second largest acquisition after LinkedIn that the company bought in 2016 for $27 billion.

According to the report, Nuance could expand Microsoft’s capabilities in voice software.

Nuance is a US multinational computer software technology corporation, headquartered in Burlington, Massachusetts, that provides speech recognition and artificial intelligence.

Nuance merged with its competitor in the commercial large-scale speech application business, ScanSoft, in October 2005.

ScanSoft was a Xerox spin-off that was bought in 1999 by Visioneer, a hardware and software scanner company, which adopted ScanSoft as the new merged company name.

Today, Nuance leads innovation in conversational AI, making intuitive, award-winning technology that adapts to each business and every unique situation.

The company reported $7 million in net income ($346 million in revenue) for its first quarter that ended December 31, 2020.

“We continued to advance our strategic initiatives, accelerating our cloud transition across our core platforms in Healthcare and focusing on our AI-first approach in Enterprise. In Healthcare, we saw solid performance in our cloud-based offerings, growing cloud revenue 28 per cent year-over-year,” said Mark Benjamin, CEO at Nuance.

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