I'm moderately interested in the SpeakJet. I'm not sure how practical
it would be outside of making singing robot sounds - which as corny
as it is, is something I'd most likely do... :)
Would the TTS256 preclude one from sending particular pitch & timing
information about the allophones being voiced?
-Chris
On Apr 10, 2006, at 9:59 PM, djbrow54 wrote:
> I got my TTS256 interfaced yesterday to my SpeakJet. What a neat
> chip. You just send messages to the chip terminated in a
> carriage return ($0d) and it speaks! No more endless strings of
> numbers to get this chip to say a few words. The input buffer is 256
> bytes and you cannot send data to the chip when it is speaking. I
> decided to stay with the larger ATMEGA8 since the ram is larger and
> implemented a 832 byte buffer. I can send three complete buffers to
> the ATMEGA8 for queuing to the TTS256. The speakjet speaking pin
> should interface back to the ATMEGA8 although I haven't tried this in
> my configuration yet.
>
> So ... some questions.
>
> Who is interested in a SpeakJet?
> What are you planning on doing with it?
> Are you interested in the TTS256 chip?
> Any interest in an I2C bridge chip to connect to the SpeakJet/TTS256?
>
> Dave
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