[DECtalk] New synthesizer Gnuspeech

brandon T brandongold98 at gmail.com
Thu Oct 22 20:37:57 EDT 2015


Hello,

I hope this can be made into an NVDA addon please, I really like its
quality for some reason.

Thanks,

Brandon

On 10/22/15, Carlos Fernandez via Dectalk <dectalk at bluegrasspals.com> wrote:
> Actually, it wouldn't. The pronunciation at this stage is not sufficient
> to make it usable in any context, let alone a high-demand one like
> screenreading. I hope they update the system, and it generates English,
> all right, but the system is far from good.
> I am also worried about the constant mentioning of NeXT in the articles
> home page. I don't yet know if this is based off some code from NeXT,
> but the fact that they recommend actually buying a computer to run an
> operating system that still undergoes Y2K bugs and is closed-source, to
> boot, makes me wonder who is doing the work on this anyway. I would
> instead throw my support behind another sample-less speech engine with
> which we are all familiar, NVSpeechPlayer. I have been working (very
> minimally, though I intend to increase my efforts) on porting this to
> GNU/Linux and other platforms. I also want to add multilingual support
> to the engine, as it can already generate a pretty good English sound.
> I have seen what I would describe as a quantity before quality aspect to
> these projects, both by those who write them and those who collect them.
> While I view any speech synthesizer as a curiosity, I try to keep in
> mind the fact that the point of any engine is to be useful for some
> purpose. This usually means either naturalness of sound and fidelity to
> the true aspect of human speech or ability to function with little
> processor and memory overhead and scale to fast speeds. Those engines
> that are so old to sound extremely unnatural (take SAM from the early
> 1980s, for example) get a pass from me, as they clearly didn't have the
> capabilities that more modern hardware and operating systems make
> available to newer projects. Many other sub-par engines have been
> created and discarded throughout the years (my go-to example is
> festival, which remains incapable of almost any task given it).
> Collecting these attempts, especially when they are self-described as
> first starts, is entirely counterproductive to improving the options.
> I don't want to sound like I am prematurely consigning this project to
> the useless pile. The system may improve. If it does, it may be worth
> using in the future. At this stage, it is little of significance. I
> would recommend interested parties to work on the code, rather than
> attempting to use any program capable of generating some surrogate of
> speech in cases for which it is clearly inadequate.
>
> Carlos
> On 10/22/2015 17:50, Jake Gross via Dectalk wrote:
>> It would be nice if this was made into an nvda addon or a sapi5 voice.
>> Jake
>>
>> On 10/22/15, Miguel Villagomez via Dectalk <dectalk at bluegrasspals.com>
>> wrote:
>>> In my opinion, it sounds like a mix of Orpheus's U.S. and U.K. English
>>> accent.
>>>
>>> On Thursday, October 22, 2015, mattias via Dectalk <
>>> dectalk at bluegrasspals.com> wrote:
>>>
>>>> sounds the tts have bad english
>>>>
>>>> Den 2015-10-22 kl. 14:36, skrev Tony Baechler via Dectalk:
>>>>
>>>>> Hi all,
>>>>>
>>>>> I thought people here might be interested in reading about this
>>>>> synthesizer:
>>>>>
>>>>> http://www.gnu.org/software/gnuspeech/
>>>>>
>>>>> It's still very much in early development, but looks potentially
>>>>> interesting.  There are currently two versions, one for the Mac and
>>>>> one
>>>>> for
>>>>> Linux and Unixlike operating systems.  I don't have a Mac and I can't
>>>>> comment on Mac accessibility.  The Mac version comes with a graphical
>>>>> application which lets you change speech parameters.  I compiled the
>>>>> source
>>>>> on 64-bit Ubuntu 14.04.3 Linux if anyone wants the binaries and
>>>>> libraries.
>>>>> If you do, please write off list to the address in my signature.
>>>>>
>>>>> If you're on Windows or don't want to compile from source, you're not
>>>>> left out.  I'll shortly be uploading a demo in mp3 so you can hear it
>>>>> actually reading a large amount of text.  Yes, it should be able to
>>>>> sing
>>>>> from what I've gathered from the above site.  Here is the mp3 demo:
>>>>>
>>>>> http://classicradio.us/iso/gnuspeech_gpl.mp3
>>>>>
>>>>> Share and distribute the above demo as much as you want, but
>>>>> attribution
>>>>> would be appreciated.  It's written in C and the dictionaries are in
>>>>> plain
>>>>> text, so they should be modifyable without the graphical application.
>>>>> I
>>>>> would be interested in people's opinions on this.
>>>>>
>>>>>
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