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astro/wcslib-5.15 (Score: 0.009869938)
Library for parsing/generating FITS headers
"WCSLIB is a C library, supplied with a full set of Fortran wrappers, that implements the "World Coordinate System" (WCS) convention in FITS (Flexible Image Transport System). It also includes a PGPLOT-based routine, PGSBOX, for drawing general curvilinear coordinate graticules and a number of utility programs." - from README file.
audio/bcg729-1.0.1 (Score: 0.009869938)
Software G729A encoder and decoder library written in C
Bcg729 is a software G729A encoder and decoder library written in C, developed by Belledonne Communications, the company supporting the Linphone project. It was written from scratch and is NOT a derivative work of ITU reference source code in any kind. It can be executed on many platforms, including both ARM and x86 with very decent performances. libbcg729 supports concurrent channel encoding/decoding for multi-call applications such as conferencing.
audio/festdoc-1.4.0.1 (Score: 0.009869938)
Documentation for Festival
Festival documentation in texinfo, HTML, DVI and PostScript formats
audio/festival-2.4 (Score: 0.009869938)
Multi-lingual speech synthesis system
from the authors: The Festival Speech Synthesis System is a general multi-lingual text-to-speech system for Unix platforms. It is written in C++ and includes a Scheme-based scripting language. Included with Festival are lexicons and voices that together form a whole text-to-speech system. For output via esd do: (Parameter.set 'Audio_Method 'esdaudio) NAS and direct output are documented in section 23 of the users' manual. If you need the OGI extensions, install ports/audio/festival+OGI instead. Trevor Johnson
audio/festlex-oald-1.4.1 (Score: 0.009869938)
Oxford Advanced Learner's pronunciation dictionary for Festival
This is the Oxford Advanced Learner's pronunciation dictionary (British English), modified for the Festival speech synthesis system.
audio/festvox-czech-0.1 (Score: 0.009869938)
Czech male voice for Festival
Quality free Czech diphone database. Primary goal is for speech system Festival but it's not limited on it. Sources, sound files and boundaries are available so it can be used in other free speech synthesizer systems too.
audio/festvox-don-1.4.0 (Score: 0.009869938)
British English male voice for Festival speech synthesis system
note from the NetBSD maintainer: This voice uses a very small and efficient pulse-excited LPC diphone synthesis method. It was originally written by Steve Isard. The front end uses the same British English lexicon, intonation and duration methods as rab_diphone. This voice can be activated via (voice_don_diphone). Trevor Johnson
audio/festvox-el11-1.4.0 (Score: 0.009869938)
Castilian Spanish male voice for Festival
from the NetBSD maintainer: This voice provides a Castilian Spanish male voice using a residual excited LPC diphone synthesis method. The lexicon is provided by a set of letter to sound rules producing pronunciation accents and syllabification. The durations, intonation and prosodic phrasing are minimal but are acceptable for simple examples. This voice can be activated via (voice_el_diphone) .
audio/festvox-kal16-1.4.0 (Score: 0.009869938)
American English male voice, sampled at 16 kHz, for Festival
from the NetBSD maintainer: This voice provides an American English male voice using a residual excited LPC diphone synthesis method. It uses the CMU Lexicon pronunciations. Prosodic phrasing is provided by a statistically trained model using part of speech and local distribution of breaks. Intonation is provided by a CART tree predicting ToBI accents and an F0 contour generated from a model trained from natural speech. The duration model is also trained from data using a CART tree. Trevor Johnson
audio/festvox-kal8-1.4.0 (Score: 0.009869938)
American English male voice, sampled at 8 kHz, for Festival
from the NetBSD maintainer: This voice provides an American English male voice using a residual excited LPC diphone synthesis method. It uses the CMU Lexicon pronunciations. Prosodic phrasing is provided by a statistically trained model using part of speech and local distribution of breaks. Intonation is provided by a CART tree predicting ToBI accents and an F0 contour generated from a model trained from natural speech. The duration model is also trained from data using a CART tree. Trevor Johnson