El 21 de mayo de 2010 11:01, bharat joshi <bharatjos...@gmail.com> escribió:

> Hi,
>
> Ya we know about GVC, and we have tried it also.
> You can say VEDICS is a super set of GVC.
> Some of the key features of VEDICS are
>
>
>    1. Accuracy is much better as we use SPHINX-4.
>    2. File System Navigation - >Navigating files and folders is very easy.
>    3. Recognizes any thing- > Vedics is dynamic, in the sense it generates
>    words and its pronunciation dynamically.For example, if we take a simple
>    command like "run text editor", the front end changes as editor opens.
>    Vedics generates a new list of words from the front end and produces its
>    pronunciation and grammar files. This makes Vedics recognize any word. It
>    can even recognize junk words like "hsjft"
>    4. We can pause and start VEDICS through voice using "stop listening"
>    and "start listening" command.  In gvc, people had to use mouse to do
>    it. You can also quit Vedics through voice.
>    5. Works perfectly on Ubuntu 9.10 and 10.04.
>    6. Can access any element including checkbox, radio button, links,
>    lists etc....
>    7. Popup menus like the one that opens on right click are also
>    accessible.
>
>
>
I'm fascinating with the power of feature 3, it can generates pronun&grammar
on-the-fly and context-based?
I suppose you mean that Vedics can recognize any word but in english
languages, isn't? What about other languages?
Do we need a text/voice corpous to feed and training it in other languages?

And about feature 5, did you have some precompiled binaries or even debian
packages for testing? I can't find in sourceforge any other thing than the
svn repo.

Cheers!


> 2010/5/21 José Félix Ontañón <felixo...@gmail.com>
>
>> 2010/5/21 Nischal Rao <rao.nisc...@gmail.com>
>>
>> Hi,
>>>
>>> I and some of my friends have created a speech assistant software for
>>> linux called VEDICS(Voice Enabled Desktop Interaction and Control System).
>>> Using this software the user can access any element found on the user's
>>> screen through speech. The user can also navigate the filesystem through
>>> speech.
>>>
>>> We have created some demo screencasts of the software:
>>>
>>> 1. Accessing the gnome panel and application.
>>> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WrVaJXtv0WU
>>>
>>> 2. Changing the theme and background.
>>> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zRgX94qGj3g
>>>
>>> 3. Navigating directories and playing songs:
>>> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kVQwAoeIavk
>>>
>>> 4. Running a slide show:
>>> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JtzA8TFwvuI
>>>
>>> 5. Running default applications and window operations:
>>> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iCEANbu8p50
>>>
>>> 6. Stopping and starting vedics:
>>> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TLFtdrlt3lM
>>>
>>> 7. Creating and deleting files:
>>> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_3CFAl22h2o
>>>
>>> 8. Navigating links:
>>> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AufBaaJazKU
>>>
>>>
>>> Currently the software doesn't support the dictation facility. However,
>>> we are planning to add this feature in the future.
>>> The best part of this software is that it is speaker independent, no
>>> training is required and it can recognize words not present in the English
>>> dictionary.
>>>
>>> You can find the source code at :
>>> http://sourceforge.net/projects/vedics/
>>>
>>
>>
>> Hi Nischal,
>>
>> Congrats! The screencasts are amazing and, as i can see in sourceforge, it
>> relies on at-spi for discovering the elements that could be commanded,
>> isn't?
>>
>> I suppose you know about gnome-voice-control, even both projects shares
>> sphinx for speech recognition so, what do you think vedics differs from
>> gnome-voice-control or improve it?
>>
>> Cheers!
>>
>> --
>> http://fontanon.org
>>
>> _______________________________________________
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>> gnome-accessibility-list@gnome.org
>> http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gnome-accessibility-list
>>
>>
>
>
> --
> Regards,
> Bharat Joshi
>



-- 
http://fontanon.org
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