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Re: New Java-based software speech synthesizer available
- To: tcross@xxxxxxxxxxx
- Subject: Re: New Java-based software speech synthesizer available
- From: "T. V. Raman" <raman@xxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Thu, 27 Dec 2001 08:13:42 -0800
- In-Reply-To: <15402.43719.435845.136164@xxxxxxxxxxx>
- Resent-Date: Thu, 27 Dec 2001 11:22:33 -0500 (EST)
- Resent-From: emacspeak@xxxxxxxxxxx
- Resent-Message-ID: <"H54ASC.A.KmB.Vj0K8"@hub>
- Resent-Sender: emacspeak-request@xxxxxxxxxxx
You're confusing two tangled issues when you correctly state
your preference for an open source implementation, and
the fact that the Viavoice RPMs have not been updated in a
while.
On the other hand, so long as the free-loaders of the world
insist on not paying for anything --and that by the way *was
not* what the Free Software movement is about--
you'll continue to see the present status quo.
Festival and Festival Lite exist because of years of speech
research by Alan Black and his team at Edinburgh and CMU.
>>>>> "tcross" == tcross <tcross@xxxxxxxxxxx> writes:
tcross> This is very interesting. As it is an open
tcross> source software synth, it may be a good
tcross> replacement for ViaVoice. I like ViaVoice very
tcross> much, but because we have to rely on a binary
tcross> only distribution and as it seems new versions
tcross> are not being released, I fear it may get
tcross> difficult to support over time. For example,
tcross> when I wanted to get viavoice running on a
tcross> debian system recently, I had to install extra
tcross> C++ libraries which were not part of the
tcross> standard install because the ones originally
tcross> installed were a later version and Via Voice
tcross> needed the earlier version.
tcross> Of course, the problem with the Java based TTS
tcross> under linux is identifying the best JVM to
tcross> use. Its been a while since I have done any
tcross> java, but the last time I looked, you had JVMs
tcross> from Java, Blackdown and IBM as well as some
tcross> open source interpreters etc. This may make
tcross> things a bit confusing for the novice
tcross> user. However, it would be great if I could use
tcross> emacspeak on my windows machine at work.
tcross> It looks like I may have found an interesting
tcross> project to tackle when I take my holidays in
tcross> March!
tcross> Tim Jason White writes:
>> The following announcement appeared on the
>> java-access mailing list. I am forwarding it to the
>> Emacspeak list because, on the FreeTTS web site at
>> Sourceforge, the authors mention an Emacspeak demo
>> (there appears to be an Emacspeak speech server
>> available). I haven't downloaded any of the software
>> yet, so these remarks are based purely on the web
>> page.
>>
>> Forwarded message
>>
>> From: Willie Walker <william.walker@xxxxxxxxxxx> To:
>> JAVA-ACCESS@xxxxxxxxxxx Subject: Sun Microsystems
>> Laboratories releases an open source speech
>> synthesizer Date: Wed, 19 Dec 2001 17:25:17 -0500
>>
>> Greetings!
>>
>> It is my pleasure to announce that the Sun
>> Microsystems Laboratories Speech Group has made its
>> FreeTTS (http://freetts.sourceforge.net/) speech
>> synthesis engine available via open source through a
>> BSD-style license. The engine is written entirely in
>> the Java(tm) programming language and provides
>> partial support for the synthesis portion of the Java
>> Speech API 1.0 specification.
>>
>> You can read more about this project in an article on
>> http://java.sun.com:
>>
>> http://java.sun.com/features/2001/12/flite.html
>>
>> An excerpt from the article is as follows:
>>
>> "Researchers from Sun Microsystems Laboratories in
>> Burlington, Massachusetts have created an open source
>> speech synthesis engine written entirely in the
>> Java(tm) programming language. This high-performance
>> software converts text to speech. You type it; your
>> workstation speaks it. And the whole world benefits.
>>
>> Willie Walker, Paul Lamere, and Philip Kwok combined
>> the Festival Speech Synthesis System, with its robust
>> architecture, and the Flite engine, with its succinct
>> algorithms, to create FreeTTS, a synthesizer that
>> delivers both power and flexibility.
>>
>> The team ported Flite, programmed in C, and Festival,
>> written in C++ and Scheme, to the Java programming
>> language. FreeTTS generated intelligible speech four
>> weeks after researchers wrote the first line of
>> code. But even with such a short development time,
>> the team did not compromise results. FreeTTS
>> outperforms both original applications, executing
>> nearly four times faster than Flite in some
>> environments."
>>
>> For the Sun Labs Speech Group,
>>
>> Willie Walker, Manager and Principal Investigator
>>
>> -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
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tcross> -- Tim Cross mailto: tcross@xxxxxxxxxxx
tcross> phone: +61 2 6772 5973 mobile: 0412 969193
tcross> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
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--
Best Regards,
--raman
Email: raman@xxxxxxxxxxx
WWW: http://www.cs.cornell.edu/home/raman/
PGP: http://www.cs.cornell.edu/home/raman/raman.asc
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