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Emacspeak information


Emacspeak
Developer(s)Emacspeak Inc.
Initial release25 April 1995; 29 years ago (1995-04-25)[1]
Stable release
59.0 (VirtualDog) / 22 November 2023; 6 months ago (2023-11-22)
Preview releaseNon [±]
Repository
  • github.com/tvraman/emacspeak Edit this at Wikidata
Written inC, Emacs Lisp, Tcl[citation needed]
Operating systemCross-platform[which?]
Available inEnglish
TypeScreen reader for a Text editor
LicenseGPL
Websiteemacspeak.sourceforge.net

Emacspeak is a free computer application, a speech interface, and an audio desktop (as opposed to a screen reader). It employs Emacs (which is written in C), Emacs Lisp, and Tcl. Developed principally by T. V. Raman (himself blind since childhood, and who has worked on voice software with Adobe Software and later IBM), it was first released in April 1995.[1] It is portable to all POSIX-compatible OSs. It is tightly integrated with Emacs, allowing it to render intelligible and useful content rather than parsing the graphics (hence it is sometimes referred to not as a separate program, but a subsystem of Emacs); its default voice synthesizer (as of 2002, IBM's ViaVoice Text-to-Speech (TTS)) can be replaced with other software synthesizers when a server module is installed. Emacspeak is one of the most popular speech interfaces for Linux, bundled with most major distributions. In 2014, Raman wrote an article describing how the software's design was impacted by shifts in computer technology and its general usage over 20 years.[2]

Emacspeak achieves its integration by being written largely in Emacs Lisp using "advice", enabling it to literally be a wrapper around most functions that change or otherwise modify the display. Auditorily, verbalizations are pre-emptible, and common actions like opening a menu or closing a file have a brief sound associated with that particular action; it also immediately verbalizes all insertions of characters, and attempts to speak as much of the context sentences around the cursor's present location as possible.

Emacspeak facilitates access to a wide variety of content, from the web to DAISY books.[3]

On Monday, April 12, 1999, Emacspeak became part of the Smithsonian Museum's Permanent Research Collection on Information Technology at the Smithsonian's National Museum of American History.

  1. ^ a b Announcing Emacspeak 3.0, April 25, 1995
  2. ^ Emacspak Turning Twenty. Retrieved 2014-09-15.
  3. ^ Source code for handling DAISY books. Retrieved 2007-02-18. Archived February 6, 2012, at the Wayback Machine

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