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Namine Ritsu (波音リツ), a voicebank originally built for UTAU, was also later added to another piece of software called Sinsy as "Namine Ritsu S". Another voicebank originally developed for the UTAU software, Yamine Renri (闇音レンリ), was also later added to Synthesizer V. The popular UTAU character Kasane Teto was released as a ...
Kasane Teto (Japanese: 重音テト) is a virtual singer software (known as a voicebank) created on the Japanese textboard 2channel for April Fools' Day, 2008. [1] Although the software was initially created as a hoax and did not exist, it later was actually produced and made compatible with singing voice synthesis software UTAU, allowing it to sing.
The software works similar to the Vocaloid software by Yamaha and another free shareware software called UTAU. The default voicebank is named Yu Niaoniao (余袅袅), however additional voicebanks can be made manually to produce new vocals and additional languages are possible. The website for the software offers several other vocals for ...
The Vocaloid software had a great influence on the development of the freeware UTAU. [150] Several products were produced for the Macne series (Mac音シリーズ) for intended use for the programs Reason 4 and GarageBand. These products were sold by Act2 and by converting their file format, were able to also work with the UTAU program. [151]
SOURCE: Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System, South Dakota State University (2014, 2013, 2012, 2011, 2010).Read our methodology here.. HuffPost and The Chronicle examined 201 public D-I schools from 2010-2014.
HuffPost and The Chronicle made multiple efforts to obtain reports detailing athletics spending between 2010 and 2014 from all public institutions, but 33 did not respond by Oct. 15, 2015, the final date reports could be included in our analysis. Nine schools with incomplete data are noted in our Subsidy Scorecards.
The Macne series interface Macne Nana version. The idea of releasing a voicebank for Macintosh computers was conceptualized in the Japanese voice actress Haruna Ikezawa's regular column "天声姫語 Vox Reginae, Vox Dei" ("voice of the queen, voice of god," a spoof of Asahi Shimbun's editorial article "天声人語 Vox Populi, Vox Dei" or "voice of the people, voice of god") carried in the ...
SOURCE: Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System, Kansas State University (2013, 2012, 2011, 2010).Kansas State University did not respond to multiple requests for its 2014 report.