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  2. G.729 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/G.729

    G.729 is a royalty-free [1] narrow-band vocoder-based audio data compression algorithm using a frame length of 10 milliseconds. It is officially described as Coding of speech at 8 kbit/s using code-excited linear prediction speech coding (CS-ACELP), and was introduced in 1996. [2]

  3. IBM Shoebox - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IBM_Shoebox

    The IBM Shoebox was a 1961 IBM computer that was able to perform mathematical functions and provide speech recognition. It was capable of recognizing 16 spoken words, including the digits from 0 through 9.

  4. Wikipedia:Spoken articles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Spoken_articles

    To request an article to be spoken, see Category:Spoken Wikipedia requests. For all other information, see the WikiProject Spoken Wikipedia page. Spoken articles marked with were featured articles at the time of recording. Similarly, spoken articles marked with were good articles at the time of recording. There are 1,842 spoken articles in English.

  5. Vocal range - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vocal_range

    A voice type is a particular kind of human singing voice perceived as having certain identifying qualities or characteristics; vocal range being only one of those characteristics. Other factors are vocal weight , vocal tessitura , vocal timbre , vocal transition points , physical characteristics, speech level, scientific testing, and vocal ...

  6. Douglas Stanley - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Douglas_Stanley

    Douglas Stanley (7 April 1890 [1] [note 1] – 19 April 1958) was an English-born American vocal pedagogue and scientist. Best known as the voice teacher of Nelson Eddy and Cornelius Reid, he was at the forefront of the field of voice science, pioneering instruments, methodologies, and techniques of standardization in researching and measuring vocal acoustics, use, and behaviors—especially ...

  7. Voice computing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Voice_computing

    The Amazon Echo, an example of a voice computer. Voice computing is the discipline that develops hardware or software to process voice inputs. [1]It spans many other fields including human-computer interaction, conversational computing, linguistics, natural language processing, automatic speech recognition, speech synthesis, audio engineering, digital signal processing, cloud computing, data ...

  8. Jerry Garcia’s AI-Created Voice Can Now Narrate Audiobooks ...

    www.aol.com/entertainment/jerry-garcia-ai...

    The singer-songwriter’s voice can now read to ElevenReader app users their choice of audiobooks, articles, poetry, PDFs, and more through what Eleven calls the Iconic Listening Experience ...

  9. Wikipedia:WikiProject Spoken Wikipedia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:WikiProject...

    Recording and editing articles can be time-consuming, and recordings are sometimes abandoned or have their source text dramatically changed before they are finished. It helps to start with smaller, more manageable articles first and then move up to bigger ones. Incorrect pronunciation can mislead non-English-speaking users.