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GVC Now Supports German and Russian Using VoxForge Audio
By kmaclean - 5/2/2008

From this post:

gvc [gnome-voice-control] has just got German and Russian support. To test it you need to checkout gvc from svn trunk as well as pocketsphinx and sphinxbase from trunk. Then unpack voxforge acoustic model to ${prefix}/share/pocketsphinx/models/hmm/voxforge-de and start applet in de_DE locale. Everything should work fine, testers are welcome.

Submit your speech and win Ipod Touch
By kmaclean - 2/3/2008
Voice2Type has a new initiative to collect telephony speech: 
Calling all speech recognition enthusiasts!
 
Help us assemble a speech corpus for automatic speech recognition of continuous speech using landline and/or cellular phones and win an iPod Touch!
 
Just go to http://www.voice2type.com/submit_speech and follow the instructions for submitting your speech and you will be automatically entered into a drawing for a brand new iPod Touch. It will only take about 3 to 5 minutes of your time and the recording will be donated to the VoxForge open source project.
 
Check it out right now: http://www.voice2type.com/submit_speech
 
Thanks,
The Voice2Type Team
Many thanks to Abhishek Singh and his team for setting this up and helping improve free and open source speech recognition. 
 
Click here for more information
 
Ken 
 

MojoMove
By kmaclean - 10/14/2007

MojoMove is a new site that houses Podcasts that sometimes get incorporated into the LibriVox community podcast feed.   They also have a Forum where you can ask technical questions about recording your speech using Audacity for recording audio books for LibriVox (e.g. microphones, Audacity plugins, etc ...).

They are also graciously helping us out with their Shorts Weekly Poetry Reading and their Shorts Weekly Monologue Reading.  Each week they select a new short poem or monologue, and invite users to submit their reading of it.  The resulting audio files are then stored on archive.org, and can then be used by VoxForge for incorporation into our speech corpus, and for the creation of acoustic models.

Many thanks to Robert and Ticktockman for their efforts on this!

Ken