Hi,
Yes, that's right. But, at that time I wasn't ready to delve into it.
So I didn't take any notes or links. Now, I am really learning quite a
bit and loving every minute of it.
Dan
On Dec 5, 2007, at 7:57 PM, Jane Jordan wrote:
You know, I think Gregg Kearney showd us something similar this year
or last--I remember reading something similar then, it just made no
sense to me then. It still makes only a little sense, but as I
slowly make my way through the stuff, I think it will be more
interesting and sensible. I am already thinking of a way I can help
a friend make puzzles.
Jane
On Dec 5, 2007, at 10:40 PM, Dan Keys wrote:
Hello,
Hey Jane. Thanks a bunch for contacting Apple Accessibility and for
posting that link. I started to read it and there really is a lot
of stuff to go through. Now you can really call it a night!.
Dan
On Dec 5, 2007, at 7:23 PM, Jane Jordan wrote:
Did I say I was calling it a night? Ha!
Excerpted text from my brief, but useful! correspondence with
Apple's Accessibility team.
Jane
Begin forwarded message:
From: Accessibility <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: December 5, 2007 3:39:49 PM EST
Subject: Re: Adjusting Say Speech In Terminal
Hi Jane:
Check out this site for information on how to embed commands into
the text to speed it up or change other attributes:
http://developer.apple.com/documentation/UserExperience/Conceptual/SpeechSynthesisProgrammingGuide/index.html
Embedded commands are described in the section titled "Techniques
for Customizing Synthesized Speech" - > "Use Embedded Speech
Commands to Fine-Tune Spoken Output.
For example, to set the rate of the spoken text to 300 words per
minute use something like:
"[[rate 300]] This text should be spoken fast."