A brief Google search for "voxsin" returns nothing related to NVDA, speech
synthesisers or accessibility, so I really don't know what's being discussed
here.
"Auralux" appears to be a "simplified real-time strategy game", so again I
can't really tell what this has to do with NVDA...
Maybe Shaun can provide some URLs to whatever it is.
Regards,
Antony.
On Thursday 25 April 2019 at 18:01:11, Brian's Mail list account via Groups.Io
wrote:
Is this another synth then? I feel like I've walked in late to a show here.
Incidentally one thing to think about on Speech hub is that it may need
considerable reworking to work in nvda when it goes Python three. I found
Speech hub quite laggy even on fast pcs.
Brian
bglists@...
Sent via blueyonder.
Please address personal E-mail to:-
briang1@..., putting 'Brian Gaff'
in the display name field.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Shaun Everiss" <sm.everiss@...>
To: <nvda@nvda.groups.io>
Sent: Thursday, April 25, 2019 12:10 PM
Subject: [nvda] voxsin and nvda
Hi.
Well its confirmed from auralux.
They are not sure at least the person that spoke to me isn't, but you can
run a single licence for user under wsl and if that addon works in nvda
and you want it then thats probably ok.
However I really think its a bit stupid to do all that to run speech.
A question could be though, if you got a raspberry pi or something
little, connected to a computer, or speaker running linux natively,
could you run voxsin from that then it could be like one of those serial
synths I guess again a bit overkill but it makes sence.
To be honest, knowing what I know I'd try speechhub again.
--
Anything that improbable is effectively impossible.
- Murray Gell-Mann, Nobel Prizewinner in Physics
Please reply to the list;
please *don't* CC me.