HTC devices usually come with Voice Speed Dial. I don't like that program at all. You have to record voice tags for its actions, so it's not really a voice recognition program. Plus it's limited to creating voice tags for launching applications and dialing contact phone numbers.
Voice Central had some nice features, but it didn't work through Bluetooth and it didn't work with Media Player. The Blackberry Voicesignal software is okay, but it only works with dialing contact names and checking phone status. The Symbian s60 voice recognition program also is only good for dialing contacts. I've also used VoiceSignal 2.1 on the Q9h. It works well and has options for sending text/email messages, but it doesn't integrate with the Calender or Media Player either.
So I'm with MS Voice Command 1.6 all the way. I use it on my Kaiser with an Interphone enabled motorcycle helmet or Invisio bone conduction microphone headset. It literally tells me the name of incoming callers while I'm on the motorcycle! Then with the Interphone, I can say "Answer" to pick up. It also announces appointment reminders, reads text messages to me, and reads email subjects as they arrive. I can make phone calls, ask about my next appointments, ask for the time, and check phone status all without taking my eyes off the road. The only thing missing is some GPS integration so that I could say something like, "Navigate to next appointment" or "Navigate to contact name" so it could give me turn-by-turn directions.
Granted Voice Command works a lot better if you have a decent Bluetooth radio in your device as well as plenty of program memory and processing power. A lot of the older HTC devices had very noisey Bluetooth connections that did not work well for voice recognition at all.
Also, another thing I love... in the car with my Kaiser plugged into the stereo and GPS software running, I can press the button on my bluetooth headset and say "Play Kalaeloa" to change my Media Player's playlist without having to interact with the device and search manually... and without having to carry around another MP3 player or buy a Ford with Microsoft's Sync system installed.