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Subject:
From:
David Poehlman <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
David Poehlman <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Wed, 19 Dec 2001 21:25:33 -0500
Content-Type:
text/plain
Parts/Attachments:
text/plain (80 lines)
----- Original Message -----
From: "Peter Korn" <[log in to unmask]>
To: "Gnome Accessibility List" <[log in to unmask]>;
<[log in to unmask]>; <[log in to unmask]>;
<[log in to unmask]>
Sent: Wednesday, December 19, 2001 6:01 PM
Subject: FWD: Sun Microsystems Laboratories releases an open source
speech synthesizer


Greetings,

Attached is an announcement from my colleague Willie Walker of the Sun
Labs
Speech Group of the availability of FreeTTS, a speech synthesis engine
written in the Java(tm) programming language and released under a
BSD-style
license.

Regards,

Peter Korn
Sun Accessibility team


-------- Original Message --------
From: Willie Walker <[log in to unmask]>
Subject: Sun Microsystems Laboratories releases an open source speech
synthesizer

Greetings!

It is my pleasure to announce that the Sun Microsystems Laboratories
Speech Group has made its FreeTTS (http://freetts.sourceforge.net/)
speech synthesis engine available via open source through a BSD-style
license.  The engine is written entirely in the Java(tm) programming
language and provides partial support for the synthesis portion
of the Java Speech API 1.0 specification.

You can read more about this project in an article on
http://java.sun.com:

    http://java.sun.com/features/2001/12/flite.html

An excerpt from the article is as follows:

  "Researchers from Sun Microsystems Laboratories in Burlington,
   Massachusetts have created an open source speech synthesis engine
   written entirely in the Java(tm) programming language. This
   high-performance software converts text to speech. You type it;
   your workstation speaks it. And the whole world benefits.

   Willie Walker, Paul Lamere, and Philip Kwok combined the Festival
   Speech Synthesis System, with its robust architecture, and the Flite
   engine, with its succinct algorithms, to create FreeTTS, a
synthesizer
   that delivers both power and flexibility.

   The team ported Flite, programmed in C, and Festival, written in C++
   and Scheme, to the Java programming language. FreeTTS generated
   intelligible speech four weeks after researchers wrote the first line
   of code. But even with such a short development time, the team did
not
   compromise results. FreeTTS outperforms both original applications,
   executing nearly four times faster than Flite in some environments."

For the Sun Labs Speech Group,

Willie Walker,
Manager and Principal Investigator


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