synthesizers

Bailey, Bruce Bruce.Bailey at ed.gov
Thu Mar 31 12:02:14 UTC 2005


You might consider the newish DecTalk USB.  I haven't gotten my hands on one, but it is the only external USB synthesizer I could find when I was looking about a year ago.  I have no idea if it is multi-lingual or just how well plug-and-play is supported.  URL:
http://www.axsol.com/decusb/

Sacramento is a little under 400 miles (a little over 600 kilometers) from Los Angeles.


-----Original Message-----
From:	blinux-list-bounces at redhat.com on behalf of Ari
Sent:	Thu 3/31/2005 4:59 AM
To:	Linux for blind general discussion
Cc:	
Subject:	synthesizers

Hi all,
In June my teacher is going to America, so I'm trying to see if she can't
get me a hardware synthesizer to start using linux. She'll be in L.a, so is
their any distributor of hardware synthesizers and adaptive technologies who
would deliver one, or near enough so that she can go their? Also, Janina
recommended to me the DoubleTalk, but are their other options that are
multi-lingual? I've heard of one called Keynote Gold, and I see it's
compatible with speakup, but is the quality of speech good, how much more
expensive is it, what languages does it come in, and who sells it? The
DoubleTalk   connects via a serial
port, so I'm guessing that I'll need to install drivers for it everytime, is
their any synthesizer that is plug-and-play USB which gets detected and
recognised automatically?
Thanks
Ari



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