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Re: [Emacspeak] TTS Server Implementation Questions



The repository is public, nothing at all required to pull it. See if you 
have the same problem with other repos, I am guessing you will. It sounds 
like a configuration issue of your git on Windows. 

> On Apr 10, 2024, at 13:58, John Covici <covici@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> 
> Thanks a lot for that clarification.  One note, when I tried to do a
> git clone of sharpwin  under windows I got a login dialog asking for a
> user name and password -- this did not happen when I tried it under
> Linux, so  this was part of my confusion.
> 
> On Wed, 10 Apr 2024 11:02:19 -0400,
> Robert Melton (via emacspeak Mailing List) wrote:
>> 
>> [1  <text/plain; us-ascii (quoted-printable)>]
>> So, this can legitimately be a little confusing, I remember being very
>> confused when I first got started with emacspeak. 
>> 
>> Emacspeak can be thought of as a set of three major components. 
>> 
>> 1. The emacspeak elisp code, the core.
>> 2. The emacspeak servers, written in a bunch of languages and toolkits, they
>>   act as bridges to the TTS engines. They communicate using the emacspeak 
>>   server protocol, which is what we have been discussing here. 
>> 3. The emacspeak build system, this does things like build loaddefs, builds 
>>   the .el files into .elc files and has assorted scripts for maintaining 
>>   the docs, the info, generating pdfs, tons of great stuff. 
>> 
>> So, what I have done with SharpWin and swiftmac is added new options to 
>> part 2 above, I added new native servers to the list of possible servers. 
>> between emacspeak and the native mac and windows tts systems. On Windows 
>> the debate is ongoing on the best way to do the build. 
>> 
>> 
>>> On Apr 10, 2024, at 09:43, John Covici <covici@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>>> 
>>> Now, I am very confused -- there is no recemt emacspeak for windows,
>>> so how would I use this at all?  HHow would I even compile emacspeak
>>> for windows?
>>> 
>>> Thanks.
>>> 
>>> On Wed, 10 Apr 2024 07:29:40 -0400,
>>> Robert Melton wrote:
>>>> 
>>>> SharpWin is written mostly in .NET Core, but it explicitly uses Windows native and built-in
>>>> speech server. There are already multiple solutions for Linux environments. 
>>>> 
>>>>> On Apr 10, 2024, at 01:08, John Covici (via emacspeak Mailing List) <emacspeak@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>>>>> 
>>>>> Also, could I use your server in the Linux gui such as gnome -- I use
>>>>> gnome and orca?
>>>> 
>>>> --
>>>> Robert "robertmeta" Melton
>>>> lists@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>> 
>>> -- 
>>> Your life is like a penny.  You're going to lose it.  The question is:
>>> How do
>>> you spend it?
>>> 
>>>        John Covici wb2una
>>>        covici@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
>> 
>> --
>> Robert "robertmeta" Melton
>> lists@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
>> 
>> [2  <text/plain; UTF-8 (8bit)>]
>> Emacspeak discussion list -- emacspeak@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
>> To unsubscribe send email to:
>> emacspeak-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx with a subject of: unsubscribe
> 
> -- 
> Your life is like a penny.  You're going to lose it.  The question is:
> How do
> you spend it?
> 
>         John Covici wb2una
>         covici@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx

--
Robert "robertmeta" Melton
lists@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx



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