I'm running espeak 1.47.05, which I built from source and which is configured to use pulseaudio. The distro supplied versions of espeak have never worked well for me. I always have to recompile and set to use pulseaudio before espeak works well and does not chop off words and crash every few lines. I'm running a totally default pulseaudio setup on both my systems (one Linux Mint 14 and one Ubuntu 13.04). Both systems are using integrated intel audio cards. However, on a previous system, using an Sound Blaster card (can't remember what it was, but it had an unusually high input sample rate), I did have to tweak the pulseaudio configuration to get reliable audio. In particular, I had to set sample rate and some other settings. I worked out what was needed by increasing the log level for pulseaudio and a long test, tweak, restart, test cycle. However, this was quite a while back with considerably older versions of pulseaudio and when there was still some flux in how linux was dealing wiht real time scheduling, shared memory and process limits. A lot of this seems to have settled down in the last couple of years, so I'm not sure how much of this is still relevant. For me, the default out of the box settings have been fine apart from having to re-compile espeak. However, some sound hardware, especially Sound Blaster and/or emu10k based boards seem to need a bit of tweaking to get right. The pulseaudio web site use to have some info on various hardware known to be problematic or requiring special settings. Might be worthwhile checking there. In particular, both the pulseaudio and alsa web sites use to curse some of the sound blaster cards/drivers for having significant issues/bugs. Tim Jason White writes: > The problem turned out to be an error in the Debian packaging that probably > also affects Ubuntu users. I've submitted a patch. > > This doesn't solve my Emacspeak speech server/Espeak problems - in fact, it > makes them worse: I now get very broken up audio as soon as I interrupt speech > for any reason. Has anyone else seen this when using PulseAudio for output? > Any suggestions? > > On the positive side, if we can call it that, I haven't lost speech entirely > during the few minutes that I've tested with PulseAudio properly enabled. > > We aren't out of the woods but I hope we're starting to get a map of the > terrain. > > ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the emacspeak list or change your address on the > emacspeak list send mail to "emacspeak-request@xxxxxxxxxxx" with a > subject of "unsubscribe" or "help". > -- Tim Cross IT Security Manager Information Technology University of New England Phone: +61 2 6773 3210 Mobile: 0428 212217 E-Mail: tcross@xxxxxxxxxxx Web: http://www.une.edu.au/itd --- Please avoid sending me Word or PowerPoint attachments. See http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/no-word-attachments.html Any fool can make things bigger, more complex, and more violent. It takes a touch of genius (and a lot of courage) to move in the opposite direction. âAlbert Einstein ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the emacspeak list or change your address on the emacspeak list send mail to "emacspeak-request@xxxxxxxxxxx" with a subject of "unsubscribe" or "help".
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