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Amiga computer related discussion => Amiga Software Issues and Discussion => Topic started by: spudmiga on July 16, 2019, 11:19:34 PM
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Hi guys.
I wonder if any of you could possibly help.
After copying all the neccessary files from the Workbench 1.3 disk to my 3.1 flash drive installation, I now have Say working on my A1200. Good times! ;D
A long time ago on a previous install I had a few lines in my startup-sequence which made my Amiga talk to me when Workbench had finished loading, using the Say program in the background which I thought was really cool.
Unfortunately I cannot remember how to do this and can't seem to find any threads here on how to do it.
Does anybody know? I would be ever so grateful ;D
Spud. 8)
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I don't remember the syntax, but
for your peace of mind, At the least use the user-startup
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Say is one of the first things I install on a new system! I usually grab the files from OS2.04, but the 1.3 versions do have that more "classic" sound :)
Lots of options for what you're looking to do, although User-Startup is probably easiest. You can use Say from the command line without invoking the UI. Adding the line Say booting complete
should do it. You might want to put a Run >NIL: in front of it so that the boot process doesn't pause while it's talking. You can include the usual Say switches for pitch/speed/etc. as command-line arguments.
If you want to get complicated, you could also invoke Say's -x switch to speak the contents of a text file (so that you can change what the machine says without having to edit the entire User-Startup). If you installed the files for the SPEAK: DOS device, you could also Copy yourtextfile SPEAK:
for the same result.
Finally, instead of User-Startup, you could put the commands into a separate script, give it a Project icon (set the default tool to IconX, add the tooltype DONOTWAIT) and put that in WBStartup.
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Wasn't there also a talking word processor?
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Wasn't there also a talking word processor?
Yeah, I have a recollection of an advertisement or article in Amazing Computing or Amiga World about something like that. Can't remember the name, though :-\
I think either Final Writer or Wordworth can also read back what you've written, but I don't think they pitched that feature as a key selling point.
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Yes, prowrite.
This is what I have in my user-startup:
say -r -p65 Welcome to Workbench
;D
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Yes, I found it..
It was call "Talker"
big smile
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Say is one of the first things I install on a new system! I usually grab the files from OS2.04, but the 1.3 versions do have that more "classic" sound :)
I did not realise that the 1.3 voice is different to the 2.x voice.
That is interesting, I do have 2.04 and 2.05 disks at my disposal, for whatever reason I took it from 1.3.
What is the difference?
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Wasn't there also a talking word processor?
Yeah, I have a recollection of an advertisement or article in Amazing Computing or Amiga World about something like that. Can't remember the name, though :-\
I think either Final Writer or Wordworth can also read back what you've written, but I don't think they pitched that feature as a key selling point.
Excellence can do this too ;D
Spud 8)
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I did not realise that the 1.3 voice is different to the 2.x voice.
That is interesting, I do have 2.04 and 2.05 disks at my disposal, for whatever reason I took it from 1.3.
What is the difference?
2.04 is ever-so-slightly more natural sounding. I’m not sure if it’s due to improvements in narrator.device or translator.library, but I suspect the latter. There’s an unofficial patch on Aminet for a v43 of translator.library that offers even more options, although the UI is a little clunky.