On 16/10/2007, Luke Yelavich <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > - From reading a summary of the recent Boston summit, I don't remember seeing > anything regarding > speech. I would really like to see if we as a community can't work out a > solution.
My 2cs, a standard speech platform would be excellent for developers and users. I would like to add a simple self voicing capability to Jambu but have not done so yet, largely due to the number of permutations to consider. Charles Chen suggested a number of possibilities including bundling espeak. My ideal is a standard Gnome speech API which could be assumed to be there (so no need to include in build) but still allows end user flexibility. So that's similar to SAPI on Windows (the SAPI speech markup is just icing on the cake). As Linux thrives on choice a more palatable option might be an API wrapper that works with the various speech systems. Could a module be factored out of Orca for this as much work has already been done there? Python would suit me as it seems to be becoming the language of choice for Gnome AT. Then for a simple self-voicing scenario I could just: import pygspeak as pgs pgs.say('hello world') I18n would no doubt add some interesting wrinkles. For general non-visual accessibility making the program fully accessible to Orca should be the approved approach. A mechanism is needed to mute self voicing apps when using Orca. A non server solution could be to check for orca in the say() function and having orca check at startup. -- Steve Lee -- Open Source Assistive Technology Software PowerTalk - your presentations can speak for themselves www.fullmeasure.co.uk _______________________________________________ Gnome-accessibility-devel mailing list Gnome-accessibility-devel@gnome.org http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gnome-accessibility-devel