Hi! This message comes from a mac/iphone list, thought people would find it extremely interesting as we have quite a few Iphone users on list now.
If anyone wants a demo of any of the voices mentioned below then let me know and I'll see what I can do. Cheers! Begin forwarded message: > Hi All, > > "Speak It!" is an app that lets you use the Acapela group's Infovox voices on > the iPhone or iPod Touch, and supposedly also for the iPad, on text that you > type or paste into the app, and create audio files with these voices that you > can either play back or mail. This is absolutely great, because you can > control the speed and volume of the voices, and use voices that you may > choose to purchase for other languages. The basic app ($1.99) from Future > Apps, Inc. comes with Heather (U.S.), Graham (U.K.), Lucy (U.K.), and Ryan > (U.S.). You can buy additional voices through in-app purchase for $0.99 > each. I've just finished downloading Alice (France) through the app (took > about 10 minutes to download and install). There's a text entry area (I > copied and pasted what I wanted into it instead of typing it in), and a > picker wheel at the bottom of the page to select the voice. > > The screen when you start the app has two buttons at the top ("Settings" at > the left and an unlabeled button for info at the right), and three buttons at > the bottom ("Speak It", "Actions", and an unlabeled button for saved items > created as a result of using the "Actions" button). Below the top row of > buttons is an area for text entry following the label: "Enter text to say" > where you can either type in or paste in copied text. This is accessed in the > usual way by double tapping in the text area to bring up the virtual > keyboard. Below the text entry area and occupying the bottom section third > or so of the screen is picker wheel labeled "Select Voice". > > You'll likely want to double tap the "Settings" button at the top left of the > screen to adjust the voice rate before you start speaking with the Speak It! > voice. There are three settings options to adjust: Text font size (for low > vision folks), Voice volume, and Voice rate. Each control has both a button > and a slider. The button doesn't do anything except update to a number you > can read off -- I think this is words per minute in the case of the rate. > When you make your adjustments flick left to get back from your settings to > the "Done button" on the right edge (not quite at the top of the screen; > maybe a fifth of the way down from the top of the screen in the vertical > screen extent if you touch it directly) and double tap. > > When you enter text, you have the option of either leaving the virtual > keyboard up, and double tapping the "Speak It!" button, which has now moved > up so it is just above the virtual keyboard and below the text entry area, at > the left side of the center of the screen, or of first flicking right from > the "Speak It!" button to the "Done" button at the right side of the center > of the screen, and double tapping to dismiss the virtual keyboard. > > The first mode is convenient when you want to review material and continue > to type in. When you've finished entering text, you'll want to use the > "Done" button to dismiss the virtual keyboard so you can also gain access to > the "Actions" button for saving items, either as text or to create audio > files, and to access the saved items (via the unlabeled button to the right > of the "Actions" button) under either the list of "Saved Phrases" or the > "Saved Audio Files". Double tapping one of the "Saved Audio Files" > > To have Speak It! read the text, double tap the "Speak It!" button at the > bottom left. Once you double tap that button, two buttons, the left for > "Play/Pause" and the right for "Stop", will appear in the location of the > "Speak It!" button. You have to move your finger slightly to the left to > double tap the "Play/Pause" button. Double tapping the "Stop" button causes > the "Play/Pause" button to disappear, and for the area occupied by the > "Play/Pause" button and "Stop" button to be replaced with the "Speak It!" > button. > > As mentioned before there are two unlabeled buttons: one at the top right and > one at the bottom right corner for saved items. The button at the top right, > that you will use to purchase new in-app voices, takes you to an Info screen > where there is a Help button at the top left that gives you information about > trouble-shooting issues with Speak It!, and where the first listed button is > the "Speak It! Store" button, which you can use to purchase additional > voices. (The also have buttons further down the list for their other > applications, but you probably don't want to leave the app to find out about > these or buy them when you're first setting up Speak It!.) The additional > Acapela group voices currently available for this app are for (U.K. or U.S.) > English, French (including a Canadian French voice), German, Spanish > (including an American Spanish voice), and Italian. > > Miscellaneous other comments: Just after downloading the Alice French voice > I found VoiceOver's behavior a bit sluggish. There are various suggestions on > their FAQ (reached from "Help" button via the unlabeled button to the "Info" > page) about possibly deleting the app, shutting down and restarting the > iPhone/iPod Touch, and then downloading and installing updates for the app > through iTunes on your computer if this happens (you will not be charged > again). I didn't have to do any of this, but I did restart my iPod Touch. > There may be practical limits on the size and number of voice recordings and > saved phrase files you can keep. I haven't used the app often enough to > tell. I did notice that when I saved longer files (130,000 words -- novella > length) that sometime buttons would simply click and not get announced when I > navigated the control pages quickly. I'd also guess that saving and emailing > lengthy audio files may also take up memory resources of the iPhone and > affect VoiceOver performance. The audio files are AIFF -- not compressed, > and the default format for Macs. They'll play in Windows iTunes, and on your > iPhone, but maybe not in other Windows apps without conversion to a > compressed format. They can also get quite large, so do some judicious > experimenting on small scales before you get carried away. Low vision users > will like the ability to save these phrases in large font text. This app is > also supposed to be universal binary and work on the iPad, too. If you have > listened to the Infovox voices from the Assistiveware page and downloaded the > trial (for the Mac) at: > http://www.assistiveware.com/ivoxsamples.php > you'll probably have a much better feeling for what these voices sound like, > particularly speeded up, than trying out the same voices at the in-app > purchase store. Some list users will also like the fact that male English > voices are available. I typically don't try to run these voices as fast as > the regular voices for the iPhone/iPod Touch. As Brett has mentioned > previously, when you set rates over 90 per cent for the English language > voices, and you don't use the default U.S. voice, you're likely to experience > some dropped bits of speech. This is not the only app that uses the Infovox > voices for text to speech. Anne recommended the "Read 2 Me" app ($4.99) by > Retinal Media. I'll have to explore the latest update, because they have > recently added adjustable voice speed (yay!) and Google Docs importing, along > with larger file support, and appears to be less buggy. But the "Speak It!" > app has support for other language voices. > > FutureApps, the developer of Speak It!, also has translation apps that use > these voices. It's possible that some of the other languages from their > iSpeak series that are demoed on their web site will also make it into Speak > It! (e.g., Portuguese, Dutch, Swedish, and Polish). Here's the FutureApps > URL: > http://www.future-apps.net/ > > • Speak It! Text to Speech ($1.99) by FutureApps is available internationally > at the iTunes Store: > http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/speak-it-text-to-speech/id308629295?mt=8 > Comes with 4 U.S. and U.K. English Infovox voices. Additional voices > (currently in English, French, Italian, German, and Spanish) may be purchased > for $0.99/each via in-app purchase. This app is universal binary, and also > works for the iPad. > > • Read 2 Me ($4.99) by Retinal Media: > http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/read-2-me/id313752154?mt=8 > English only Infovox voices, and also universal binary to work with the iPad. > New features of variable voice speed, Google Docs importing, and more. > > Cheers, > > Esther To unsubscribe from this list, send a blank email to: pc-audio-unsubscr...@pc-audio.org