Re: Gnopernicus, Festival, VMware and getting it all working
- From: "Al Puzzuoli" <alpuzz gmail com>
- To: "Gnome accessibility" <gnome-accessibility-list gnome org>
- Subject: Re: Gnopernicus, Festival, VMware and getting it all working
- Date: Sun, 26 Mar 2006 10:53:54 -0500
Hello Garry,
I have also been testing with VMware, as well as real boxes, running Fedora
5, and the latest Ubuntu flight releases.
one interesting point is that I am seeing the exact same issue you are
experiencing with festival under VMware, and I am uncertain as to why this
is the case. I have not tried freTTs, but I have had good results in a
Fedora VM with both Software Dec, as well as TTSynth, formerly ViaVoice. I
purchased a prerelease version of TTSynth a few months back from Capital
Accessibility. The synthesizer itself works quite well and is very
responsive; However, I am becoming concerned by a seeming lethargy on the
part of IBM to actually roll out a release version. The current prerelease
package is only distributed as rpms, and it is fairly simple to get it up
and running on any RedHat based box. However, I have been unable to obtain
any documentation as to how the synthesizer could be used under other
distros, such as Ubuntu.
On a slightly different note, once you resolve your synthesizer woes, you
might consider looking at Orca as well as gnopernicus. orca is available
via anonymous cvs from the gnome repository. I believe the program is still
considered prerelease, but already includes some very nice functionality,
such as an intuitive flat review mode, as well as good support for some
popular productivity applications, such as Open Office writer, and
evolution.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Garry Turkington" <garrys lists gmail com>
To: <gnome-accessibility-list gnome org>
Sent: Saturday, March 25, 2006 11:59 PM
Subject: Gnopernicus, Festival, VMware and getting it all working
Hi,
After having it on my todo list for literally years I've been trying to
get Gnopernicus up and working. I've been using a Windows screen reader
for the GUI side of the world and either a console terminal or more
recently Speakup for my access to Linux. Considering Linux is where I
spend the majority of my time it seems silly not to try and maximize my
uses of its tools.
So the great Gnome accessibility experiments started this week and my
results have been less than stellar. So I'd like to ask some questions to
try and put me on the right path. Some are pretty specific, others are
more in the arena of general guidelines.
My biggest problem is that I can't get Festival to work. Any time I throw
a text string at it I get nothing but a rather stuttered rasp from the
speakers. Nothing even vaguely intelligible. Sound in general is
working - tested that with .wav and .mp3 files.
I suspect my problem is that I've been trying this within VMware virtual
machines. I could believe that the issues around guest/host timing could
mess up a speech engine with an internal feedback loop but the fact that
normal audio -- and indeed freeTTS -- do speak confuses me. However, both
Festival and a demo version of Cepstral just throw noise at me. Has
anyone ever got either speech engine working in a VM? After years of
multi-boot machines I swore that I'd never return there and have been
relying heavily on VMware for some time. If I have to natively install so
be it but it'd be seriously non-optimal for me.
I mentioned I did get freetts to speak. That's only using it directly, I
never managed to rebuild all the bits I need to actually try Gnopernicus
with it. A Fedora core 5 install couldn't build the Java Access Bridge as
it seems some of the AB Java implementations are now out of date with the
internal Gnome IDL - a few new methods have appeared in places from what I
can tell. I built the AB on a Fedora Core 4 install but then the
gnome-speech build failed, not being able to find some required Java
classes.
So, what external dependencies do these packages have? Are there
specific -devel packages, libraries or jar files that need be available at
buildtime? Or are they relatively self-contained?
Last question is on what distributions people have had most success with
re getting all the pieces working. I see the Gnopernicus site only
explicitly calls out Sun's JDS and Ubuntu for its tested distros. I'm
currently using Fedora (4 and 5), CentOS (4.3), Red Hat Enterprise WS
(4) - I'll happily install Ubuntu or JDS but referencing above this would
be much easier if I can do it under VMware. If I have to install natively
then I'll become more risk averse.
Any comments or advice gratefully received. I've done a lot of googling
but I seem to be trapped by the VMware question (I assume) and what I
suspect is a version clash with building for freetts under Fedora and I've
not seen these issues directly addressed.
Many thanks,
Garry
--
Garry Turkington
garry turkington gmail com
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