On Tue, Jun 01, 2021 at 01:06:24PM -0400, Karen Lewellen via talk wrote:
[snip]
> In fact it may be fun to discover which raps better, the edge itself, or
> the screen reader. So, I need only print a page from the transcript
> choose from one of the 9 voice possibilities, and let it boogie.
Forgot to answer one.
Yes, I do want to hear my reading edge rap, but there is for me an easier
way.
In anticipation of Hamilton in the movie theatre, did not happen due to
covid
*sniff* I got a copy of a transcript file.
In fact it may be fun to discover which raps better, the edge
On Mon, May 31, 2021 at 07:47:58PM -0400, Anthony de Boer via talk wrote:
> You'd be on Debian Sid as I recall. Likewise it's good on Gentoo, but
> youtube-dl needs to be fairly up-to-date as the underlying Youtube
> service and the tool change frequently, so you need to be on a
> forward-leaning
On Mon, May 31, 2021 at 06:32:48PM -0400, Znoteer via talk wrote:
> And, if your instance of yt-dl is out-of-date and poutube serves you some
> errors,
>
> "youtube-dl -U"
>
> will update your instance for you. Here's a brief description from
>
>
Lennart Sorensen via talk wrote:
> Well youtube-dl still works fine whenever I use it, so that should still
> be fine. ...
You'd be on Debian Sid as I recall. Likewise it's good on Gentoo, but
youtube-dl needs to be fairly up-to-date as the underlying Youtube
service and the tool change
Hi,
While I deeply appreciate both of our input, a couple of factors that
impact my situation.
First, I referenced shellworld, a shell service to which I subscribe,
because I personally cannot run Linux.
There is no current Linux distribution with a screen reading program that
can talk to
On Mon, May 31, 2021 at 05:58:45PM -0400, Lennart Sorensen via talk wrote:
> On Mon, May 31, 2021 at 05:30:35PM -0400, Karen Lewellen via talk wrote:
> > no,
> > Previously I could from shellworld use YouTube dL, I believe we have a
> > second option too, convert the video to either mp3 or m4a,
On Mon, May 31, 2021 at 05:30:35PM -0400, Karen Lewellen via talk wrote:
> no,
> Previously I could from shellworld use YouTube dL, I believe we have a
> second option too, convert the video to either mp3 or m4a, and get the
> audio that way.
> It was a dance, but I did it for work related
no,
Previously I could from shellworld use YouTube dL, I believe we have a
second option too, convert the video to either mp3 or m4a, and get the
audio that way.
It was a dance, but I did it for work related things.
now, or at least last I checked with our admin, YouTube is less friendly
On Mon, May 31, 2021 at 03:49:03PM -0400, Karen Lewellen via talk wrote:
> Hi Mike
> ...Rap lyrics..I need to do that just for fun laughs!
> Thanks for the explanation, I cannot use YouTube these days due to Google's
> changes where lower graphics tools are concerned.
> Hey, at least he is
Hi Mike
...Rap lyrics..I need to do that just for fun laughs!
Thanks for the explanation, I cannot use YouTube these days due to
Google's changes where lower graphics tools are concerned.
Hey, at least he is showcasing the gem.
Karen
On Mon, 31 May 2021, Mike Kallies via talk wrote:
On
On 2021-05-29 6:48 p.m., Karen Lewellen via talk wrote:
...
Still, recognition gets faster once the machine learns what it is
examining, so if this source claims it takes a while, someone did not
...
Very interesting. He probably simply didn't know and wasn't able to
spend long enough
Stewart
Granted, I have used these for many years, and am rather good at the
brightness level adjustments, but, when properly trained, the recognition
wait time is less than 15 seconds depending on the material being scanned.
Which is the key, there are options for different kinds of
Granted YouTube is not a platform I can reach, but that makes me happy.
The technology established the bar for ocr which speaking personally, has
not been matched.
may keep this link in case the source knows where I can find a spare.
My spare got damaged, and I let a friend's son try to
On Sat., May 29, 2021, 07:37 Mike Kallies via talk, wrote:
>
> It's approached as a gadget guy, so no deep dives, but he demos it and
> gets into a bit of the history and the warts of the aging machines.
>
He's the only person I've seen demo one who included and commented on the
recognition
Hey Everyone,
These came up recently on the list and coincidentally there's a great
Youtuber (Techmoan) who just did a piece on the devices,
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g0jECuwrn_U
It's approached as a gadget guy, so no deep dives, but he demos it and
gets into a bit of the history and
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