Yes. Or else it's a machine learning problem at far side, with speakers
organized by, I dunno, geography.
Regardless, the models will need training.
Al Matthews,
AUC Robert W. Woodruff Library
404.978.2057 o
404.769.2617 c
- Reply message -
From: "Gary McGath"
To: "CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.N
Continuing on this part: My friend says that using any existing speech
recognition software won't work at all well for transcribing interviews
with a variety of people. All such software needs to be "trained" to the
speaker's voice.
A possible alternative is for a designated person to train the so
"Record ; send ; speech-to-text ; share and improve" -- that's pretty
much the algorithm. Or musically -
Vamp til ready
||: fire aim ready :||
Paul
On 10/3/12 4:01 PM, Al Matthews wrote:
Hi all. Thanks Jason for the excellent links.
Chrome seems to be out front with this last I looked.
Aft
Hi all. Thanks Jason for the excellent links.
> Chrome seems to be out front with this last I looked.
After somehow spending an hour reading all this, it seems like audio doesn't
work yet, right? Except on Chromium "canary" on Mac. Which is something.
Mozilla's also big into this as well http:/
Hi Paul,
Thanks for your response! I like the idea that this could be a standalone way
to capture first-person accounts as well as a way to launch more
in-depth/traditional oral history interviews.
Some of your requirements remind me of the National Library of Medicine's video
player:
"NLM Vi
Very cool. Audio should be easier than video. Thanks Jason! -- Paul
On 10/3/12 2:00 PM, Jason Ronallo wrote:
Paul,
You may want to look at WebRTC: http://www.webrtc.org/
Especially getUserMedia which allows for video capture within the
browser from a users webcam:
http://www.html5rocks.com/e
Paul,
You may want to look at WebRTC: http://www.webrtc.org/
Especially getUserMedia which allows for video capture within the
browser from a users webcam:
http://www.html5rocks.com/en/tutorials/getusermedia/intro/
This is bleeding edge stuff and probably not ready for a real project,
but it may
Hi Robin,
Thanks so much for your comments.
I was thinking of a completely automated process. I'm thinking of it as
oral history because, at least in the initial use of the program, we'd
use a set list of questions for all respondents. I realise it probably
won't be as good/useful as the pr
Wow. That's pretty spiff! I'd love to see your Roman Empire SNAC, can you
send me the info?
Michele
-Original Message-
From: Code for Libraries [mailto:CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU] On Behalf Of Ethan
Gruber
Sent: Wednesday, October 03, 2012 11:04 AM
To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU
Subject:
Hi all,
In the last few weeks, I have undertaken a project of EAC-CPF stubs using
dbpedia and VIAF data for the Roman emperors and their relations. There's
a lot of great information available through dbpedia, and since it's
available in RDF, I put together a PHP script that can start at one poin
On 10/2/12 8:44 AM, Paul Orkiszewski wrote:
> Hi 4libers,
>
> Does anyone know of something - a kiosk, an iPad app, a web application
> - that:
I don't know of anything like it out there, but let's look at what it
might take. I've done some software work in connection with Harvard's
Iranian Oral
'Skills for the Future'
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Salary £15,070 per annum
10 posts - Education Skills (4 places available) or in Curatorial Skills (6
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Applications are invited for one of ten traineeships at the Royal Commission
on the Ancient and Historical Monum
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