Am 20.06.2016 um 15:31 schrieb Michael Keuter <li...@mksolutions.info>:

> 
> Am 20.06.2016 um 15:09 schrieb Lonnie Abelbeck <li...@lonnie.abelbeck.com>:
> 
>> Stefan,
>> 
>> Historically, AstLinux's target hardware was never up to any quality 
>> Text-to-Speech. Todays AstLinux hardware is much more capable, but users 
>> today also expect more from Text-to-Speech, ex. Amazon Echo.
>> 
>> We have always suggested that *if* you need Text-to-Speech services, use a 
>> custom AGI in your dialplan to remotely retrieve/generate a sound file to be 
>> played locally in real time.
>> 
>> I would expect even the best Text-to-Speech would not do well with proper 
>> names, which is what you seem to want to "speak".
>> 
>> Personally, displaying the callerid name is good enough for me. :-)
>> 
>> Lonnie
>> 
>> 
>> On Jun 20, 2016, at 4:08 AM, Stefan Ulm <s....@divus.biz> wrote:
>> 
>>> Hi all,
>>> 
>>> I’m developing a small application, which will give the possibility to 
>>> start calls to certain extensions over UDP commands from external devices.
>>> A very nice feature will be, that the calling party will be spoken once the 
>>> call is accepted.
>>> For this I would need text to speech conversation in asterisk dial plan.
>>> Does Astlinux distribution have a text to speech possibility on board and 
>>> how it can be used on the fly in asterisk dialplan?
>>> 
>>> Best regards
>>> 
>>> Stefan Ulm
>>> Technical Department | Research & Development
>>> stefan....@divus.eu
> 
> Hi,
> 
> a few years ago I also had a customer request with TTS. At that times I 
> looked a bit around.
> And I stumbled upon http://espeak.sourceforge.net/index.html
> 
> I haven't tested it, but it should be kinda lightweight.

I forgot the link to the Asterisk integration:
https://github.com/zaf/Asterisk-eSpeak

>From what I figured out at that time was that "libsndfile" and "libsamplerate" 
>are needed additionally (both are available in BR2).

Michael

http://www.mksolutions.info




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