home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
Really Useful CD 1
/
ReallyUsefulCD1.iso
/
extras
/
utilities
/
_tim
/
_help
next >
Wrap
Text File
|
1992-04-25
|
3KB
|
76 lines
!Tim - A Speaking Clock for the Desktop
---------------------------------------
This program is (C) Tim Browse 1992.
You are free to copy and distribute it as long as no
charge is made and this !Help file remains intact.
Ok, boring stuff over, now for the slightly less boring stuff...
This is one of those vital and productive utilities for the
Archimedes desktop. It puts an icon on the icon bar, and when
you click select on it, your Arc literally tells you the time.
It occupies 64k on my A440, although you might get it down to
less on a machine with a smaller page size.
This program evolved from a program a friend of mine wrote while
we were working at Rediffusion. Due to the hi-tech nature of the
company (hahahaha!) we frequently had little to do, and Dave (my
friend) would write numerous silly unix shell scripts. Thus he
wrote a program to print out the time in English. I foolishly
suggested that as I had a sampler for my Arc, it would be a
simple matter to record fragments of speech and add them to his
program so the SPARCstation would actually talk to you. He fell
in love with this idea and pestered me for ages until I sampled
some speech. Hey presto, it worked. I then thought I might as
well desktopify this for my Arc and here it is, for no other
reason than I need to increase my download quota on Arcade(!).
Salient features are:
* Samples loaded and played dynamically - ie. doesn't soak up
memory when idle
* VIDC Enhancer friendly - if the system variable
Tim$VIDCEnhancerPresent is set (see !Run file) then the sample
rate will be adjusted if the current mode greater than or equal
to 96 to compensate for the 36MHz VIDC clock.
* Tells you nicely if not enough free memory to play samples
* Source included! (makefile for ARM C v4)
* Tacky icon
* 16kHz speech (which by the way, means it sounds much better
than the original SPARC version at 8kHz - wake up Sun, and get
some decent sound hardware in your workstations!)
* Minimal documentation (sorry, no Requirements Specification)
The speech is sampled from my very own dulcit tones using the
rather lovely Serial Port EcoSampler, which is possibly best
known for being irritatingly small (irritating if you bought one
of those podule ones instead that is).
Re: my voice in the samples:
Sorry if I sound bored, but if you put much expression into it
you get some very strange combinations, depending on the time
(obviously). As it is, it's a bit dodgy sometimes anyway.
Apologies for any clicks on sample transition but I did my best
to clean up the speech - if you want to improve it the files are
in Armadeus format in the (surprise, surprise) 'speech' directory.
Obviously, if you replace the files with your own of the same
name, you could make the program use your voice or perhaps the
voice of your girlfriend/boyfriend/special friend named Flossy
(baa!).
Have fun, but whatever you do, be safe.
Thanks to Dave Hockley for the original lamentable source which,
before you complain, I didn't even _try_ to improve.
Tim Browse,
1, Arkle House,
6, Chiltern View Road,
Uxbridge,
Middlesex.
Arcade #985
Cryton #306 (don't log on much to this one)