Hi all lovers of classic computing. As a blind lover of yester-years computers I would
like to share some personal experiences. Starting in the late ‘70s and continuing well
into the early 21st century; us blind folks happily plugged along on any number of Atari,
Commodore, Apple, and Microsoft DOS machines. While we considered it magic at the time;
there really was no magic to it just some simple science. We used external speech
synthesizers with names like Arctic, Double-Talk, DEC Talk, Vortex just to name a few. The
most common, and arguably the best was the venerable DEC Talk Express (external) and its
internal cousin the DEC TALK PC.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bPW2S4fZMJY
Here is the general theory:
https://www.listening.com/blog/speech-synthesis
But from the end user’s point they didn’t have to concern themselves with that. In the
case of the popular DECTalk Express the user merely needed to connect the DecTalk to a DB9
serial port on their computer and direct their screen reader software to it.
For blind lovers of vintage computing now the software screen readers are still around in
various Internet archives. Many have been released into the public domain for use free of
charge. An example of this is JAWS for DOS:
https://allinaccess.com/happ/
The challenge is that the supply of used external speech synthesizers has or soon will be
dried up. Unfortunately, as we get old and pass on many of these units get thrown out.
Consequently, the world of vintage computing for us blind folks is coming to a close. What
would once again, open up the world of vintage computing to us blind folks is a recreation
of an External DECTalk Express. The way I can imagine this is that a Linux software speech
synthesizer, like ESpeak, could be running on a Raspberry Pie. The Pie would have a USB to
serial connection installed to allow for connection to a DB9 serial port on the computer,
which is what the screen readers expect. So far all of that is off-the-shelf software and
hardware. What would have to be created is a software program that could be run on the Pie
that would listen for the text stream coming in from the serial port and then pass that
input along to the speech synthesizer which in turn could speak through the headphone jack
on the Pie.
This program would have to listen and respond to DECTalk control character strings. They
can be found at:
https://rmdir.de/~michael/DECtalk_Express/rongemma/volume.htm
And now for my plea for help. If there are any Linux/Pie developers that would like to
take on this project for the benefit of all blind vintage computing enthusiasts, I would
love to hear from you. I honestly don’t know what fair compensation would be but I am sure
some compensation could be involved. Even if the fine folks here don’t want to get
personally involved I would love to hear opinions on the feasibility of this project as
well as suggestions.
Thanks
Frank
twoheartsinthedark(a)hotmail.com
Estimated parts list:
Raspberry Pie
https://www.amazon.com/CanaKit-Raspberry-Starter-Kit-PRO/dp/B0CRSNCJ6Y/ref=…
Speak speech synthesizer for Linux
https://espeak.sourceforge.net/download.html
USB to DB9 serial:
https://www.amazon.com/Adapter-Chipset,DB9-Serial-Converter-Windows/dp/B075…