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Text-to-Speech on a Low-Power Chip

bluephone writes: "The EE Times has a story on a new chip from Winbond that can take ASCII or UNICODE text and convert it to either spoken English or Mandarin (the Chinese language, not the orange). The low-power chip scans the text and translates it into spoken phenomes and outputs it to a filter for smooth analog sound, or can directly output the digital signal. Imagine a cell phone with this, you can have your email read to you, rather than seeing a line at a time on a dinky screen, street directions from a website, or even Slashdot's headlines. :)"

2 of 263 comments (clear)

  1. I bet it will choke... by MarkusQ · · Score: 5, Insightful
    I bet it will choke on:

    The lead story read: "Unionized environmental health workers object to new chip that can read un-ionized lead levels."

    Reading english is a lot tougher than most English speaking people think.

    -- MarkusQ

  2. Re:Why dump more tech than necessary into the phon by DdJ · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Sure, the tech is cheap and relatively disposable, but is moving every feature but the kitchen sink into the cellphone really the way to do it?

    I've got a co-worker, our Oracle admin, who's blind. As things stand, with most cell phones he can't do anything except dial out and answer calls. He can't use the built-in address book to place calls for example, because all of the info is in text on a tiny screen. With text-to-speech software on the phone, he'd be able to use the address book just like sighted folks, read text messages he received earlier even when he's in an area with no coverage just like sighted folks, and so on. This is a good idea.