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Filed under: Text, Hardware

Amazon agrees to cripple Kindle 2

In a victory for neo-Luddites the Author's Guild, Amazon has announced its intention to disable the speech to text function its new Kindle 2 ebook reader. Amazon announced its intention to selectively disable the device following criticism from the Author's Guild President Roy Blount Jnr. that the Kindle 2 would undermine the billion dollar a year audiobook market.

In a statement released to the press, Amazon argued that the text-to-speech feature was legal, but said that it would give authors the right to decide whether or not to disable the feature for their books:

'Kindle 2's experimental text-to-speech feature is legal: no copy is made, no derivative work is created, and no performance is being given... nevertheless, we strongly believe many rightsholders will be more comfortable with the text-to-speech feature if they are in the driver's seat... Therefore, we are modifying our systems so that rights holders can decide on a title by title basis whether they want text-to-speech enabled or disabled for any particular title.'

It's unclear if the Author's Guild plans to now campaign to receive royalties from all other text-to-speech programs, but its hollow victory is sure to be received poorly by the visually impaired and any other consumers who are forking out around $350 bucks for their new Kindle and want to actually use the legal functionality that it has been designed with.

Hopefully Amazon will flag up which cheapskate publishers have disabled the text to speech functionality of their books very clearly, so that Kindle users can be sure to vote with their wallets and boycott those responsible for this shameful decision.

[Via the New York Times]

Filed under: Kids, Text, Utilities, Windows, Freeware

My Talker 1.2: Kid-friendly type-and-talk app

My Talker 1.2 is easily the simplest type and talk application available for download.

When you first get started you are presented with a large text box and a talk button. That's pretty much it. No formating tools, no option menus, nothing. The one thing you can do is select from three animated characters who will, in a very fun manner, speak what you type. The three choices are: a genie, a green bird named Peedy, and a butler named James. Each character has its own animations and slightly different computer created voice. You can also hide the characters if they become a distraction.

In addition to the characters, you can also select the Professional version which gives you an animation-free voice that you can also save .wav file recordings of. It appears that only the Professional voice can be recorded as the licensing for the other voices is no doubt different.

The application is very kid-friendly and would be an excellent resource for teachers and tutors (especially those working with special needs children). The speech works phonetically when My Talker isn't able to recognize a word and follows punctuation clues to add emphasis. A text balloon appears above the character while speaking which indicatives what is being spoken. The animations are simple yet creative, and can be rather humorous at times. Best of all, it's free!

Filed under: Audio, Fun, Text, Utilities, Windows, Blogging, Productivity, Microsoft, Freeware

RSS RSS Text to Speech

RSS Text to SpeechAs part of the app-a-day experiment, the Software Jedi has released a program called RSS Text to Speech. At first I though this program would be incredibly annoying, and in fact it very well can be, but there are certainly some use cases that make sense. The idea here is that you put in a few RSS feeds for things that you want to stay on top of. RSS Text to Speech then polls the feeds you've entered, and as soon as something new is detected on the feed, it is read aloud using Microsoft's built-in text to speech engine. The voice options you have available are dependent on what version of Windows you're running.

Although I don't think I could handle having this thing running all the time, there are times when I want to monitor a breaking story, and I could see that this utility could certainly be useful in that circumstance.

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