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[Emacspeak] Re: Emacspeak on Android



I think the Astro Slide might be a really interesting Emacspeak device, especially if the dual-boot Linux supports native audio and if someone wrote an Emacs package for handling calls/SMS when in Linux...
https://www.indiegogo.com/projects/astro-slide-5g-transformer#/
Bill
-----Original Message-----
From: T.V Raman <raman(a)google.com> 
Sent: Tuesday, 4 May 2021 20:47
To: Tim Makarios <emacspeak.correspondence(a)freespoken.nz>
Cc: emacspeak(a)emacspeak.org
Subject: [Emacspeak] Re: Emacspeak on Android

Tim Makarios <emacspeak.correspondence(a)freespoken.nz> writes:

Very Nice!

I suspect tweaking buffer-size will give you most bang for the buck; Are you using Outloud or Espeak?

Once you get this tuned to your liking, I'd request you write it up as a simple org file and post it somewhere; I'd also like to include it in the emacspeak distribution when the write-up is ready.
> Hi,
>
> Thank you all for your replies.  Inspired partly by them, partly by an 
> answer I received on the #termux IRC channel, and partly by my own 
> stubbornness, I searched for ways to get the audio out of something 
> like UserLAnd or a Termux PRoot environment.
>
> And I succeeded!  With auditory icons, and everything!
>
> The trick is to use PulseAudio to stream the audio out of UserLAnd (or 
> PRoot).  In particular, I installed pulseaudio in UserLAnd's Debian 
> environment and added this line to the bottom of /etc/pulse/default.pa
> there:
>
> load-module module-simple-protocol-tcp source=auto_null.monitor 
> record=true
> port=54713 listen=127.0.0.1
>
> (Apologies for any spurious linebreaks added by my email program; it 
> should be a single line.)  Then with PulseAudio started, I connected 
> to the stream from SimpleProtocolPlayer NG 
> https://f-droid.org/packages/fr.jakse.raphael.simpleprotocolplayer
> and started Emacspeak in UserLAnd.  The sound is a bit choppy, but 
> it's a proof of concept, at least.  I haven't yet thoroughly tested 
> whether the audio output would be improved by different settings like:
> * a different buffer size in Simple Protocol Player NG,
> * a different sample rate,
> * streaming the audio to Termux instead of Simple Protocol Player NG,
> * running Emacspeak in Termux's PRoot instead of UserLAnd,
> * streaming over a Unix special file instead of TCP,
> * and so on.
>
> The main web pages I drew on for my understanding were:
> * https://android.stackexchange.com/a/205629
> * https://kaytat.com/blog/?page_id=301
> * https://github.com/CypherpunkArmory/UserLAnd/issues/371
> They often assume a visual desktop, but this isn't necessary; I can 
> run Emacspeak in emacs-nox in UserLAnd, without any visual desktop installed.
>
> I did notice that it didn't fully work with Debian buster's emacspeak 
> package (version 49.0) in Emacs 26.1; the output seemed to be silent 
> for some utterances, perhaps triggered by auditory icons or voice 
> locking or both.  But switching to Emacs 27.1 (from buster-backports) 
> and compiling Emacspeak 53.0 from source in UserLAnd solved that problem.
>
> Now, to complete the eyes-free experience on my mobile phone, I need a 
> physical keyboard I can connect to it, preferably without wires, so I 
> don't tie myself up in cords.  But before investing in that, perhaps I 
> should figure out whether, in the long run, Emacspeak will make me 
> more productive than a visual desktop, rather than less.  At the 
> moment, I'm finding a fairly steep Emacs-learning curve (mostly 
> keybindings), but I'm still hopeful that it will be worth it.
>
> I hope this is helpful and encouraging.
>
> All the best,
>
> Tim
> <><
>
> On Sat, 2021-05-01 at 07:37 -0700, T.V Raman wrote:
>> Typing this up mostly for the archive.
>> 
>> 1. Speech Server: Voice changes are hard to implement using the current
>>    setup, but feasable;
>> 
>>    A. Look up Google TTS documentation, provides pitch change as the
>>       only control from memory.
>> 
>>       B. Copy plain-voices.el to android-voices.el, then follow the code
>>          and update it to generate the pitch control changes.
>> 
>>          C. Finally add the necessary clause in dtk-speak.el to load
>>             android-voices.el if synthesis engine is Android.
>> 
>>             2. Auditory Icons, Again doable, but you'd have to write
>>                some Java code in the Android speech server to play
>>                sounds, you'll likely need to package over the sound
>>                files and copy them to the Android side.
>>                
>> --
>> 
>> Thanks,
>> 
>> --Raman
>> ♇ Id: kg:/m/0285kf1  🦮
>> _______________________________________________
>> Emacspeak mailing list -- emacspeak(a)emacspeak.org To unsubscribe send 
>> an email to emacspeak-leave(a)emacspeak.org
>

-- 

Thanks,

--Raman
♈ Id: kg:/m/0285kf1  🦮
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