English Speech Files

Nested
ductapeguy-20070308b
User: kmaclean
Date: 4/6/2007 1:40 pm
Views: 1223
Rating: 7

Hi, 

This is a Librivox submission (Burgess Animal Book for voxforge.wav 08-Mar-2007 19:15 127M) by ductapeguy, which was segmented using the manual process described on the How to Manually Segment an Audio Book page (note the easier approach is to use the 'Forced Alignment' process described in the Automated Audio Segmentation how-to).  

Here is the resulting segmented submission:

[   ] ductapeguy-20070308b.tgz     14-Mar-2007 13:46  39.2M  

License:


Copyright (C) 2007 MacLean

These files are free software; you can redistribute them and/or
modify them under the terms of the GNU General Public License
as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2
of the License, or (at your option) any later version.

These files are distributed in the hope that they will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the
GNU General Public License for more details.

README 

Speaker Characteristics:

Gender: [male];
Age range: [adult];
Pronunciation dialect: [General American English].

Recording Information (don't worry if you can't find some of this information):

Microphone make: [Samson Zoom H4];
Microphone type: [Digital Audio Recorder];
Audio card make: [N/A];
Audio card type: [N/A];
Audio Recording Software: [Zoom H4 (ver 1.20) Digital--  Edited for accuracy in Audacity No Effects applied rel 1.2.4];
O/S: [Ubuntu Linux].

File Info:

File type: [wav];
Sampling rate: [44.1kHz];
Sample rate format: [16bit];
Number of channels: [1];
Audio Processing: [N]
If yes, please describe: []

Prompts

The Prompts file is too long to include here - see the submission link.


Ken

--- (Edited on 4/ 6/2007 2:40 pm [GMT-0400] by kmaclean) ---


Notice: many prompts in "English Speech Files" were adapted from the prompt files contained in the CMU_ARCTIC speech synthesis database, which were in turn derived from out-of-copyright texts from Project Gutenberg, by the FestVox project at the Language Technologies Institute at Carnegie Mellon University.

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