1. Emacspeakś makefile to be modified to compile and configure e-speak as default server. 2. Espeak voice file to be modified to fix current voice lock issue. Variants appear to be misnamed. That, or the command to call them is miswritten. It has something along the lines of an xml tag with attributes for gender and number but none for variant name. This is different from invoking e-speak from the command line with other variants.
espeak --v male1 ext' This produces text using the male1 variant. espeak --v female2 extAnd on, and on, and on. I would be willing to make the necessary modification to the espeak.el file but I can make head or tail of the xml code embedded in elisp to know quite where to modify things.
Thanks. Alex On 09/15/2014 05:38 PM, kendell clark wrote:
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA512 I'd agree with this. The espeak supports needs improvement, as well as emacspeak-bookshare, unless i'm missing some configuration step. I keep running into an error of, bookshare password for nil. I enter the password, and a few seconds later, "Does not look like a bookshare response" I think either bookshare support is broken, or maybe the bookshare API has changed, not sure. Thanks Kendell clark On 09/15/2014 05:31 PM, Alex Midence wrote:Ubuntu has a deb package fo r emacspeak 38. Also one for speech. It is already two versions behind. Also, speech server package runs into trouble because DECtalk express is still default speech engine. They don't even make it anymore. Do not know why. It is still the default. E-speak makes more sense because it is everywhere now Sent from my iPhoneOn Sep 15, 2014, at 5:21 PM, Florian Beijers <florianbeijers@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: Hi, I think it is a matter of inclination more than a matter of expertise. A lot of these steps, when I look at them as you have listed them here, can be automated perfectly easily. Trouble is mainly caused by the distro-specific espeak packages and tcl. I am not an expert at this but from my point of view it doesn't look too difficult to make distro-specific packages (.deb, .rpm) for this and write an install script that automates pretty much the whole deal. I would do it, but I am currently swamped with other stuff and just don't have the time and resources to learn and research Bash scripting and distro package maintenance ... Regards, Florian 2014-09-16 0:16 GMT+02:00, Alex Midence <alex.midence@xxxxxxxxxxx>:Yes, it's a royal pain to get working. Basically, here's what you have to do: 1. Get the source via svn: $ svn co http://emacspeak.googlecode.com/svn/trunk emacspeak 2. Get the espeak development library packages. (This is distro-specific so, do some digging) 3. Get tcl8.4. 4. cd into the emacspeak directory and as root type make config 5. Type make emacspeak as root. 6. cd into the servers directory and find the linux-espeak directory and cd into it. 7. Now, do a make; make install either as sudo or root. 8. Issue the following environment variable command: Export DTK_PROGRAM=espeak 9. nano /usr/bin/emacspeak 10. Arrow down to bottom of the file and get that -q out of there. Arrow up to the line referring to emacs in unary mode and put a hash in front of it to coment out. Ctrl x and save. After all that, type emacspeak at a command line prompt and all should be well. Those of you shouting and hollering that it shouldn't be this hard are right but, trouble is, no one seems to either have the expertise or inclination to make it easier. -----Original Message----- From: kendell clark [mailto:coffeekingms@xxxxxxxxxxx] Sent: Monday, September 15, 2014 5:03 PM To: Florian Beijers; emacspeak list Subject: Re: Emacspeak installation informationhi Here, here. I run into this issue constantly. I've actually gotten emacspeak working, kind of, on arch. The pckage build is unmaintained, and I have to modify the build script just to get it to build. Then tclx builds empty binaries, and I have to try to remember what I did to get it working. Then I can't get daisy mode to work ... and the cycle repeats. Once I actually get into emacspeak and get the stuff working, it's phenomenal. The eloquence support is much g better than espeak, but I guess that'll get fixed eventually. Emacspeak is a fantastic concept ... If it just worked instead of returning with process speaker not working, that's because of tclx screwing up, by the way. We need good docs, and we need maintainers of the various distro's emacspeak packages. Thanks Kendell clarkOn 09/15/2014 04:48 PM, Florian Beijers wrote: Hi, I just finished reading through the Emacspeak at 20 article and entered what I have dubbed my "Emacspeak loop" again. This basically consists of me wanting to try Emacspeak, building a vm of the latest blind-friendly Linux distro out there to save time, downloading the latest emacspeak, trying to set it up, failing, getting frustrated and giving up. It has become a trend for me to wonder what strange, unclear error will jump out at me next when I try to configure and build Emacspeak. The installation howto that is available appears to last have been updated about 12 years ago and scraping together bits and pieces from this list , as well as other blogs, sometimes help me enough to actually get a semi-stable instance of Emacspeak going if I'm lucky. Now don't get me wrong, I really like the concept Emacspeak is trying to portray. I am a computer science student myself and aim for this to be my chosen career path. I'd like Emacspeak to be a part of that, but if I keep having to work a day or more to make the system boot up, let alone run smoothly, I am wondering where things are going wrong. Shouldn't we take a bit of time to make this part of the emacspeak experience a little more user-friendly? Think of writing up accurate and contemporary installation docs? Perhaps change the installation script so it actually looks for what speech system is currently being used rather than making the user manually configure this, just to name an example? I like the configurability Emacspeak provides. It gives you the opportunity to change everything to your liking, but again, this is no use to anybody if they can't get the system to work. I've recommended Emacspeak to others in the past and more often than notwas met with a reply sounding something like "Hmm ...yeah I've heard of it and played around with it, but I never really got it to work ..." . I think this is a shame. The more users Emacspeak has the better it can become. Configurability is good, but sometimes it's also nice to have a way to quickly get things to work. I just thought of something while writing this long email, could vagrant not offer a solution here? Offer pre-made linux VM's where Emacspeak is already configured? I'm just throwing ideas out there, because I really think this needs to be improved. 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