Roger Ebert’s new voice

March 5th, 2010 by Adam Kalsey

Text to speech engines have long been used to allow those who cannot talk to communicate verbally. Film critic Roger Ebert, who lost his lower jaw and his voice to cancer, has taken it a step further by creating a TTS voice that sounds like him.

Using the hundreds of hours of archived film clips from his reviews and other TV appearances, Ebert’s voice was reconstructed by Scotland’s CereProc, a developer of text to speech technology.

Debuting his new voice on Tuesday on Oprah, Ebert said, “You’ll know it’s a computer, but one that sounds like me. It still needs improvement but at least it sounds like me. In first grade they said I talked too much, and now I still can.”

Related posts:

  1. Simple tips for better text to speech
  2. Voice Texting With Tropo Speech & SMS Technology

Tags: , , ,

2 Tweets

One Response to “Roger Ebert’s new voice”

Leave a Reply

Please note: By submitting a comment you agree to comply with our Comment Policy. We welcome all comments, positive or negative, but do reserve the right to remove all or part of blog comments that do not comply with our policy.

Additionally, the first time you leave a comment on this blog, it will be held for moderation. After that first comment has been approved, future comments will be posted without delay.

Additional comments powered by BackType