RE: New speech speed-up library available under GPL

  • From: "Ken Perry" <whistler@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <programmingblind@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Tue, 9 Nov 2010 12:45:47 -0500

I think Bill is applying this library to the speech dispatcher so that
should take care of making speeding up espeak sound better.

Ken

-----Original Message-----
From: programmingblind-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:programmingblind-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Homme, James
Sent: Tuesday, November 09, 2010 7:01 AM
To: programmingblind@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: RE: New speech speed-up library available under GPL

Hi,
It would be wonderful if someone would have a look at Espeak. I don't know
C, so I can't help with that project.

Jim

Jim Homme,
Usability Services,
Phone: 412-544-1810. Skype: jim.homme
Internal recipients,  Read my accessibility blog. Discuss accessibility
here. Accessibility Wiki: Breaking news and accessibility advice


-----Original Message-----
From: programmingblind-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:programmingblind-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Bill Cox
Sent: Monday, November 08, 2010 7:40 PM
To: programmingblind@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: New speech speed-up library available under GPL

Hi, Stefik.  There aren't any tutorials yet.  The project is too new.
I'm currently hacking it into speech-dispatcher to enable Linux users
to enjoy it.

I do believe it will be useful in a lot of places.  Mainly, I was
worried that excellent TTS systems like Eloquence are slowly going
away, leaving people with vision impairments with only slow natural
speech TTS systems.  Now I feel that problem is solved, as we can
speed up any natural TTS system and I think achieve very high
listening rates.  I've been testing my friends and family (they think
I'm weird, but that's nothing new).  My family can listen from 2.5X to
3X faster than recorded without training, and my old school friend can
listen at 3.5X speed up.  I can listen at about 4X, but I've been
training to speed-listen for over a year.  All of us can listen to
real voices at faster rates than we can alisten to Eloquence.  This
leads me to be hopeful about the future of TTS.

Bill
> Any tutorials available for how you would use it with various existing
> speech architectures? This sounds like a useful project.
>
> Stefik
>
> On Mon, Nov 8, 2010 at 3:36 PM, Alex Midence <alex.midence@xxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
>> On 11/4/10, Bill Cox <waywardgeek@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>>> I've release a new very simple library for speeding up or slowing down
>>> speech.  It's primary strength is high quality at greater than 2X
>>> speed up.  The code can be checked out with:
>>>
>>> $ git clone git://vinux-project.org/sonic
>>>
>>> There are speech samples in the samples directory.  The primary
>>> motivation for this library is to enable low speed speech synthesizers
>>> to play at high speed with high quality.  My hope is that many will be
>>> as easy to comprehend as Eloquence, giving us a lot more options in
>>> high speed TTS.
>>>
>>> Bill
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