Voice Master Junior / hardware
From: Michael Current (aa700@cleveland.Freenet.Edu)
Date: 01/28/92-10:44:58 PM Z
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From: aa700@cleveland.Freenet.Edu (Michael Current) Subject: Voice Master Junior / hardware Date: Tue Jan 28 22:44:58 1992 Reprinted from the A.C.E.C. BBS (614)-471-8559 Permission to reprint or excerpt is granted only if the following lines appear at the top of the article: ANTIC PUBLISHING INC., COPYRIGHT 1988 REPRINTED BY PERMISSION. COVOX VOICE MASTER JR. The Voice Master Junior consists of a small box that plugs into a joystick port and a disk full of software. The box contains a microphone for recording sounds, either for playback or recognition. (COVOX IS NO LONGER MAKING ITS REGULAR $89.95 VOICE MASTER FOR THE ATARI. THE JUNIOR MODEL REVIEWED HERE HAS A FEW LESS FEATURES, AT A SAVINGS OF $50.--ANTIC ED) The most important piece of software is the BASIC wedge, which essentially adds new commands to Atari BASIC. When the Covox BASIC wedge is installed, you can use commands such as SPEAK, LEARN, RECOG and SPEED to make use of the Voice Master Junior. Voice Master Junior can record as many as 64 words or phrases in memory, but since speech can be loaded from disk, the available vocabulary is virtually unlimited. To record a word, you type (in BASIC): LEARN 1. The computer then waits for you to start speaking and records until you stop, or until the section of memory for recording that word is exhausted. To play a LEARNed phrase, type SPEAK. There are other commands for saving and loading speech files, clearing memory, turning off the screen (which improves speech reproduction) and varying the speed of playback. Further, any of these commands can be used in a BASIC program, subject to certain syntax constraints. Using the command TRAIN, you can teach the computer to recognize 31 words. (Each word must be less than two seconds long.) Upon using the RECOG command, the number of the word that was recognized is placed into a PEEKable memory location. You can then respond to each TRAINed word in a different way, effectively giving voice control of the computer. There are commands to narrow the choices and make recognition of the spoken word more reliable, and the TRAINed words are also saved when you save a speech file. Some sample programs in the well-written documentation and several programs on disk illustrate how to use TRAIN and RECOG in your own programs. Also included is a program for fine-tuning the digitized data to try to make the voice sound better. If you couldn't include speech generated with Voice Master Junior in your own programs, then this device would merely be an interesting oddity. Fortunately, you can. Including a small subroutine (provided on the disk) in your program lets you load speech files and SPEAK words. You cannot LEARN new words or use the recognition features, but you couldn't without the hardware anyway. Creating a standalone program that speaks in your voice is a lot of fun and extraordinarily simple. $39.95, 48K disk. Covox, 675-D Conger Street, Eugene, Oregon 97402. (503) 342-1271. -- Michael Current, Cleveland Free-Net 8-bit Atari SIGOp -->> go atari8 <<-- The Cleveland Free-Net Atari SIG is the Central Atari Information Network Internet: currentm@carleton.edu / UUCP: ...!umn-cs!ccnfld!currentm BITNET: currentm%carleton.edu@interbit / Cleveland Free-Net: aa700
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