<div dir="ltr"><div>Hello.</div><div><br></div><div>Where can I find Espeakm ? <br></div></div><br><div class="gmail_quote"><div dir="ltr" class="gmail_attr">On Thu, Jul 4, 2024 at 6:44 AM Grizzlly via ubuntu-users <<a href="mailto:ubuntu-users@lists.ubuntu.com">ubuntu-users@lists.ubuntu.com</a>> wrote:<br></div><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin:0px 0px 0px 0.8ex;border-left:1px solid rgb(204,204,204);padding-left:1ex">Wednesday, July 03, 2024 at 20:33, Robert Heller wrote:<br>
Re: Text to Speech software (at least in part)<br>
<br>
>> Hi<br>
<br>
>> Looking for good "Text to Speech" software, would like something that does not <br>
>> sound like Stephen Hawkins trying decide on lunch choices but is not too hard <br>
>> to install and setup, a search around the net found ESpeakm all others I found <br>
>> seemn to be aimed at software devs to combine in other projects, and need very <br>
>> high coding levels to use (so really a /w dev)<br>
<br>
>> I don't mind if it's CmdLine or GUI, but it should sound natural(ish) Enflish <br>
>> is fine so multi-language support is not that important, a few voices would be <br>
>> nice, but a good male & female will do at a push<br>
<br>
>The problem with "cheap" "Text to Speech" software is that it is phoneme based. <br>
>And there are two problems: English spelling is horrible from a phoneme point <br>
>of view: many English words are NOT spelled to match spoken English. The <br>
>second problem is that with "natural" spoken English, some words are spoken <br>
>differently (actually different phonemes) depending on context. So you have to <br>
>do things: convert the text to a sequence of phonemes, but not just a <br>
>word-by-word lookup and replace, but analysing whole sentences.<br>
<br>
>The "Stephen Hawkins" (aka "Speak And Spell") style of "Text to Speech"<br>
>systems either do a direct latin alphabet word intellegable speech, it does<br>
>sound "strange" and "unnatural" (clasic 1950s SciFi movie evil robot). <br>
<br>
>Note: most of the speech oriented assistant systems are NOT generally using<br>
>true "Text to Speech", but are mostly using recorded voice. This is generally<br>
>also true for phone answering systems. For some things words (like digits,<br>
>letters, months, state names, etc), but often whole phrases. I supose some AI <br>
>systems might be doing "intellegent" phoneme generation and maybe might be <br>
>"modulating" the phonemes to produce "natural" human voice (as opposed to <br>
>gender netural "Stephen Hawkins" / "Speak And Spell" phonemes).<br>
<br>
Many thanks, <br>
<br>
I hoped TTS had come a long way since "MS Sue" which seems to have not changed <br>
since Win95<br>
<br>
Tho old owner of my MacBookPro had a rather nice TTS (Apples default IIRC) that <br>
he played "text" files (ePub, Pdf etc) it sounded almost as good as most of my <br>
own mp3 audio books<br>
<br>
-- <br>
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</blockquote></div><br clear="all"><br><span class="gmail_signature_prefix">-- </span><br><div dir="ltr" class="gmail_signature">Mario.<br></div>