That leads me to ask, will GW be making a podcast to demo the book sense?
----- Original Message ----- From: "erik burggraaf" <[email protected]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Sunday, March 22, 2009 8:44 AM
Subject: Re: book sense


Hum, well for one thing the development on this is mostly done by HIMS. I would imagine the decision to make a book reader probably rested with them, and that the development of a book reader is detracting very little if at all from the development of window-eyes.

Which leads right in to another thing. GW probably has to distribute and support the book sense or risk losing the agreements they have with the hardware developer.

And to finish up, the book sense is the best of these players there is on paper. We'll see when the price emerges and we actually take the hardware out of the box, but HIMS and gw are developing a solid rep for putting the most amount of hardware and the best quality into this stuff. I'm supposed to like humanware because I live in Canada and they were first at a lot of this stuff and the peir pressure is overwelming, but their hardware is built like junk. Sorry boys it's just a fact. Give me a nice plextor book reader any day. The thing is, the portable plextalk pocket doesn't compete on features nearly as well as it competes on quality.

I never thought I'd want to own one of these type of players, but my mouth is really wattering over the book sense.

Best,

erik burggraaf
A+ sertified technician and user support consultant.
Phone: 888-255-5194
Email: [email protected]

On 22-Mar-09, at 11:29 AM, Chris Hill wrote:

Phone systems are based on recorded and digitized human voices.  They
have limited vocabularies and require a good bit of processing power
to pull off.  If you want your speech to be able to pronounce any
word, such systems just don't cut it.

Now, why gw-micro would want to jump in and be the third in the  market
of book readers, that one is beyond me.  I'd much rather see bug  fixes
in window-eyes.

On Sat, 21 Mar 2009 17:01:02 -0600, you wrote:

It's sad when some of the phone auto sestem sounds better then our
voices; and yet, they want to charge us so much.


At 03/21/2009, Mary Otten wrote:
On Sat, 21 Mar 2009 01:58:08 -0400, Jeremy Curry wrote:

1. Voice Text from Voiceware


I'm sorry to hear that. I don't think any of the so-called high quality voices are all they are cracked up to be, and because they try to sound human, when they fall down, they're awful. Maybe its psychological. But despite the fact that these voices can sound good when things are just
right, that condition seldom prevails, and a wanna-be human is much
worse than a more mechanical sounding synthesizer with known but
consistent flaws. So I'm sorry that there won't be an alternative such
as a tripple talk chip or even Eloquence. I know that the choice of
speech synthesizers is a personal matter. So I hope that once this
product is out, some consideration will be given to adding
alternatives, although obviously, the hardware approach won't be
possible. Too bad, as hardware like the trippletalk is still the
snappiest, most responsive speech out there.

Mary

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