Excerpts from Jeremy Jongepier's message of 2010-12-22 21:57:29 +0100: > On 12/22/2010 09:05 PM, Atte Andrà Jensen wrote: > > On 2010-12-22 20:57, Julien Claassen wrote: > >> Hello Ico! > >> why not go for praat? Praat offers many voices related functions. You > >> can use the easy, funny bits, like changing speaker/gender or I believe > >> trace different melodies, if there are any to find. You could I think > >> move the formant filters. A very interesting tool to work with voices. > >> It has a GUI, but you can also use a simple script language, if you want > >> to do something clever, based on algorythms. The results are very > >> living, very close to a real voice, if you want them that way. I liked > >> it, because it didn't sound so obviously synthesized. > > > > Sounds like something I *have* to try out! Fired it up, looks scaring, > > seems it's exclusively for offline processing. Couldn't even find a > > "load .wav" anywhere. > > > > Will dig in, though. Thanks for the review! > > > > A little OT. > > Praat is cool, just for being one of the very few, if not the only open > source project that is being developed at the faculty where I work. I > even think it's the only department of my faculty where they use Linux > on a daily basis (apart from two of my direct colleagues and myself). So > props to them :) > > Enough OT. > > Best, > > Jeremy Too bad the binary doesn't run (and building is quite hard as well, as far as I remember) _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.linuxaudio.org/listinfo/linux-audio-user