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- Path: sparky!uunet!know!mips2!news.bbn.com!olivea!bunker!sheldev.shel.isc-br.com!wtm
- From: janina@netcom.com (Janina Sajka)
- Newsgroups: misc.handicap
- Subject: Re: Artic
- Message-ID: <25682@handicap.news>
- Date: 16 Nov 92 22:16:55 GMT
- References: <25581@handicap.news>
- Sender: news@bunker.shel.isc-br.com
- Reply-To: janina@netcom.com (Janina Sajka)
- Organization: Netcom - Online Communication Services (408 241-9760 guest)
- Lines: 64
- Approved: wtm@hnews.fidonet.org
- X-Fidonet: Blink Talk Conference
- Originator: wtm@sheldev.shel.isc-br.com
-
- Index Number: 25682
-
- What you need is already available. Although what's on the market
- now may certainly bear improvement, I heartily suggest you
- investigate currently available systems before you get too involved
- in re-inventing this particular wheel. Having said this, let me
- make some general suggestions to you:
-
- 1.) Blink Talk is perhaps not the best source of experienced
- advice on this subject. Most folks in this echo will only have
- experience with the speech synthesizer component of your
- requirement -- and most of us are willing to sacrifice some
- intelligibility of speech for faster speech. This conflicts with
- your concerns.
-
- 2.) Try other echoes, like the Able Echo, and ask for
- people's experience. There's no better source of information than
- your peers who already have experience.
-
- 3.) The Artic Transport is certainly the most transportable
- speech synthesizer because it is thin and fits nicely on a notebook
- computer. This may not be your most important consideration,
- however. I don't know your circumstances, but if you're a wheel-
- chair rider, Transport's thinness probably isn't that crucial.
-
- 4.) Artic Transport is not the most intelligible synthesizer
- on the market. I would think this is very, very important to you.
- Most people who do not work regularly with talking computers find
- it hard to understand what such systems are "trying to say." This
- is even true with DEC Talk. I would put any of the portable
- incarnations of Doubletalk above the Transport, including Lite Talk
- from MicroTalk of Louisville, Ky, telephone 502 897 2705. But, DEC
- Talk is the hands-down winner for intelligibility.
-
- 5.) There are a handful of vendors in this business. For
- starters I recommend you contact Prentke Romich (see below). They
- produce word-prediction software, infra-red links, and other
- interesting products that may help you.
-
- 6.) Contact both the IBM Center and the AT&T Center for
- additional pointers.
-
- Good luck!
-
- Janina Sajka, WIDNet Manager
- World Institute on Disability
-
- AT&T Special Needs Access Program
- AT&T/NCR
- 3033 Chaimbridge Rd, B202
- Oakton, VA 22185
- Telephones: 800 342 5251/voice
- 703 691 5131/TT
- 919 230 0691 (International)
-
- IBM National Disability Center
- P. O. Box 2150-H06R1
- Atlanta, GA 30301-2150
- Telephone: 800-426-2133
-
- Prentke Romich Co.
- 1022 Heyl Road
- Wooster, OH 44691
- Telephone: 216-262-1984
-