Archive for the 'Software' Category
I wrote about installing Sphinx3 last time. It can be possible to integrate speech recognition in your applications with Sphinx3 API. Before we can go to further step, we have to know how to compiling and link library to you programs. I testes that by copying files main_livedecode.c and main_livepretend.c in sphinx3/src/programs to my directory. [...]
October 21st, 2008 | Posted in Artificial Intelligence, Linux, Software | No Comments
SPHINX is one of the best and most versatile recognition systems in the world today. I just installed Sphinx3 from tar ball source file as suggest in their page. I choose SPHINX-3 because it uses continuous HMMs. It can handle both live and batch decoding. Currently, it is the decoder most actively developed. I build [...]
October 21st, 2008 | Posted in Artificial Intelligence, Linux, Software | 1 Comment
Last time I wrote about Festival: Text to Speech on Linux. Now I found a derived version of them, it called Flite. Flite (festival-lite) is a small, fast run-time synthesis engine developed at CMU and primarily designed for small embedded machines and/or large servers. Flite is designed as an alternative synthesis engine to Festival for [...]
October 13th, 2008 | Posted in Linux, Robotics and AI, Software | No Comments
I just set up CMU Sphinx II on Ubuntu. I just want to test how this Linux Speech Recognition work. I installed the following packages: libsphinx2g0, libsphinx2-dev, sphinx2-bin and sphinx2-hmm-6k. The resource file will be in /usr/share/sphinx2/model/ which contains hmm (Hidden Markov model based-file) and model (Language Model related files). I just type
sphinx2-demo
to [...]
September 25th, 2008 | Posted in Linux, Robotics and AI, Software | 2 Comments
If you are MS$ fan, you are lucky obtained the MS native Text to Speech and Speech Recognition system. Fortunately, for a Unix-like user, Festival provides such a system. I am using the Ubuntu Linux. To enable Speech to Text, I installed these packages: festival and festvox-kallpc16k. Then, I tested by putting these command:
echo [...]
September 25th, 2008 | Posted in Linux, Robotics and AI, Software | 1 Comment
Avimator is open-source animation avatar editor for Second Life. This is very interesting because it may can be integrated with AI tool. However, it fails compiling in Ubuntu due to the name file case sensitive (.h or .H) of FLTK. After I fixed this problem, it work fine. You can download my fixed version for [...]
September 25th, 2008 | Posted in Linux, Software | No Comments
Starting learning X3D with H3D API is a nice stage in my opinion.
H3D API is an open-source, cross-platform, scene-graph API . H3D is written entirely in C++ and uses OpenGL for graphics rendering and HAPI for haptics rendering. HAPI is an open-source haptic API developed by the team behind H3D API. For more information about [...]
September 25th, 2008 | Posted in Software, Windows | No Comments
If you are writing a code that links to wxWidgets library, you can use these command to compile the code
g++ `wx-config –cxxflags` `wx-config –libs` myapp.cpp
September 25th, 2008 | Posted in Linux, Software | No Comments
I’ve succeeded compiling wxWidgets (2.8.7) for Windows (Vista) with the simple things below.
Download:
wxMSW - installer for Windows
then extract it to anywhere i.e., C:\wxWidgets
Run:
C:\Program files\Microsoft Visual Studio 9\Common7\Tools\vsvars32.bat
to get the environment variables set
Change directory to build\msw. Type:
nmake -f makefile.vc
If it succeeds, you will get
lib\vc_lib
September 25th, 2008 | Posted in Software, Windows | No Comments
Programming AI using standard programming languages, e.g., C/C++ or Java is not a good idea. It’s too general purpose language. I’m considering to select between (Common) Lisp and Prolog which are particularly designed for AI. Finally, I choose Lips as my main AI programming language. I have no reason why Lisp but I know that [...]
September 25th, 2008 | Posted in Artificial Intelligence, Software | No Comments