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Talk-talk: What I didn't say at the Maemo Summit
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Re: Talk-talk: What I didn't say at the Maemo Summit
Text-to-speech can't really work on a tablet until Nokia or someone develops good voices for use in Linux. It apparently takes a lot of work to develop a decent voice rather than the computer-tinged voices that are so common even in Windows. But there are a few good voices in Windows, good enough that for a moment one can even get the illusion that they might be human. I recently purchased one called Samantha, and I am finishing Wilkie Collins' The Woman in White using Samantha. I recently finished Pride and Prejudice using Samantha as well.
In fact, text-to-speech is the main reason I ever run Windows these days, but I like text-to-speech enough that I tend to permanently keep one computer in Windows. (I also use it for watching Netflix instant movies.) As you might be able to tell from my literature choices, I love Project Gutenberg, and am not so attracted by Kindle or the Sony Reader, because I don't like to pay. However, the magic of being able to download a current book while sitting in a hospital waiting room, which I recently did using my Centro, was amazing. Unfortunately, it was an audiobook from Audible.com, which didn't work in that situation because I didn't have headphones with me. But something about it was fantastic anyway. The whole world of audio and text has not made the next logical jump, which I think is where the real future of books on computers lies. Why do I have to choose between audio and text? Why not scrolling text, with audio? That is great, and in Windows, I can get that using TextAloud and a good Windows voice. In many cases, I actually PREFER a computer voice to a human voice, because I can't get a human voice accompanied by scrolling text! I understand that there are excellent voices for Macs, too, by the way. I have heard demos that sounded fantastic. One user said his Mac sings to him. I still dream of being told bedtime stories by Marylin Monroe, or getting the current news from a Walter Cronkite in his prime. I think that such voices will become available, but perhaps not for five or ten years. |
Re: Talk-talk: What I didn't say at the Maemo Summit
Visual IM for HOURS untethered? What kind of battery are you using?:rolleyes:
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Re: Talk-talk: What I didn't say at the Maemo Summit
Yes, I agree about the quality of Samantha [um-m, see footnote 5].
And certainly the disparity between Windows and Linux TTS is well noted; I guess that means that UMPC's have this feature now and NIT's don't. |
Re: Talk-talk: What I didn't say at the Maemo Summit
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I also hope the Linux mobile context (with many commercial players in addition to Nokia) helps creating this market, or changing the business model in a way that makes feasible to offer those very human voices. |
Re: Talk-talk: What I didn't say at the Maemo Summit
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I use it all the time, but I have very little interest in e.g. location "services", or such things. (The only non-desktop thing I do with it is navigation/mapping, but that's not what I've understood as 'location services' which seems to me to be more of some people's business model for finding places to shop or eat.) |
Re: Talk-talk: What I didn't say at the Maemo Summit
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I may be in a minority of one, but I'm using the term to mean any use that depends on GPS (or any location-approximation method) -- maybe to order information like restaurants or shops in a more meaningful way to you than alphabetization (eg, proximity) but also to initiate agents that get you other kinds of info, like the two examples I suggested. Basically, if we don't begin to use location services in this broader way, it will eventually mean only the more-limited uses you identify. |
Re: Talk-talk: What I didn't say at the Maemo Summit
In an earlier post I suggested that distinctly new social behaviors resulting from mobile-device technology awaits applications based upon users' physical location, i.e., finding the location of assenting users' devices.
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Objectively, it is fascinating to me that Nokia, with all its technical prowess, masterly design sensitivities and market presence, apparently can't see the forest for the (individual) trees. (Clearly, this viewpoint derives from the industry's historical predisposition to view the comms device as a personal [individual's] fashion gadget.) An alternative view -- ;) -- is that individuals tend to spontaneously form dynamical communities through their (often fleeting) interactions. By adding a new multimedic mode to human interactions, we increase the dimensionality of possible social phenomena. That is, we add an entirely new space to social interaction and, magically, the resulting unexploited space (a pre-ecosystem) fosters an explosion of innovation. Anyone interested in further information, refs., biblio, etc., need only message me. |
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