DeepSpeech
AnySoftKeyboard
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DeepSpeech | AnySoftKeyboard | |
---|---|---|
67 | 53 | |
24,278 | 2,754 | |
1.4% | 1.6% | |
0.0 | 9.5 | |
2 months ago | about 20 hours ago | |
C++ | Java | |
Mozilla Public License 2.0 | Apache License 2.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
DeepSpeech
- Common Voice
- Ask HN: Speech to text models, are they usable yet?
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Looking to recreate a cool AI assistant project with free tools
- [DeepSpeech](https://github.com/mozilla/DeepSpeech) rather than Whisper for offline speech-to-text
I came across a very interesting [project]( (4) Mckay Wrigley on Twitter: "My goal is to (hopefully!) add my house to the dataset over time so that I have an indoor assistant with knowledge of my surroundings. It’s basically just a slow process of building a good enough dataset. I hacked this together for 2 reasons: 1) It was fun, and I wanted to…" / X ) made by Mckay Wrigley and I was wondering what's the easiest way to implement it using free, open-source software. Here's what he used originally, followed by some open source candidates I'm considering but would love feedback and advice before starting: Original Tools: - YoloV8 does the heavy lifting with the object detection - OpenAI Whisper handles voice - GPT-4 handles the “AI” - Google Custom Search Engine handles web browsing - MacOS/iOS handles streaming the video from my iPhone to my Mac - Python for the rest Open Source Alternatives: - [ OpenCV](https://opencv.org/) instead of YoloV8 for computer vision and object detection - Replacing GPT-4 is still a challenge as I know there are some good open-source LLms like Llama 2, but I don't know how to apply this in the code perhaps in the form of api - [DeepSpeech](https://github.com/mozilla/DeepSpeech) rather than Whisper for offline speech-to-text - [Coqui TTS](https://github.com/coqui-ai/TTS) instead of Whisper for text-to-speech - Browser automation with [Selenium](https://www.selenium.dev/) instead of Google Custom Search - Stream video from phone via RTSP instead of iOS integration - Python for rest of code I'm new to working with tools like OpenCV, DeepSpeech, etc so would love any advice on the best way to replicate the original project in an open source way before I dive in. Are there any good guides or better resources out there? What are some pitfalls to avoid? Any help is much appreciated!
- Speech-to-Text in Real Time
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Linux Mint XFCE
algo assim? https://github.com/mozilla/DeepSpeech
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Are there any secure and free auto transcription software ?
If you're not afraid to get a little technical, you could take a look at mozilla/DeepSpeech (installation & usage docs here).
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Web Speech API is (still) broken on Linux circa 2023
There is a lot of TTS and SST development going on (https://github.com/mozilla/TTS; https://github.com/mozilla/DeepSpeech; https://github.com/common-voice/common-voice). That is the only way they work: Contributions from the wild.
- Deepspeech /common voice.
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Mozilla Launches Responsible AI Challenge
Mozilla did release DeepSpeech[0] and Firefox Translation[1] (the latter of which they included in Firefox, to offer client-side webpage translations.)
They definitely have fewer resources than OpenAI, and they do not produce SOTA research (their publications have plummeted to 1/year anyway[2]). So the only way for them to make progress is to seek government grants or make challenges like these.
This challenge is unlikely to be profitable for the winning team: the expected value of winnings are likely around $1K when taking into account the probability that another team gets a better rank, but ML research projects are often more expensive (recently, Alpaca spent upwards of $600 on computation alone; and of course pretraining large models is much more expensive). So the main gain will be publicity.
[0]: https://github.com/mozilla/deepspeech
[1]: https://github.com/mozilla/firefox-translations/
[2]: https://research.mozilla.org/
AnySoftKeyboard
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F-Droid, Keyboard Libraries, and Choosing a Browser
I didn't last long with the stock keyboard before installing AnySoftKeyboard which is one of the few FOSS alternative with support for swipe typing. The experience was... OK. It felt slow and it's accuracy left a lot to be desired. I still had to be slow and pretty accurate, so it didn't really feel like much of a change from the stock experience. FlorisBoard have also introduced their own implementation but the feedback I read suggested it would be much the same as my experience with AnySoftKeyboard's gesture typing.
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Android text expander with espanso config support
This sounds interesting. I think AnySoftKeyboard has some kind of shortcuts, similar to a textexpander, so you could check it out (it's also open source).
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Google keyboard alternative?
Unusable for me and many other people because of this bug: https://github.com/AnySoftKeyboard/AnySoftKeyboard/issues/1399
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Swipe keyboard app, open source and safe to usw?
AnySoftKeyboard should do the trick: https://anysoftkeyboard.github.io/
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Keyboard for Android
I tested two: AnySoftKeyboard, it's stable and works even on very old devices, but it lacks modern features and the settings are really ugly and confusing (but once you look at all of them, you'll be able to make the keyboard the way you like it, is very customizable). And I also tested FlorisBoard, it's modern, beautiful, but it's a work in progress currently in early-beta stage and it has many incomplete or buggy features. So I ended up with AnySoftKeyboard. I know there are others, but it was these two projects that caught my attention the most.
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Can anyone please explain this interaction between android calendar and Signal?
AnySoftKeyboard is another good FOSS option and does have (beta) swipe typing.
- Speech to Text app for android
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Block app Internet access (Android)
I was going to suggest NetGuard. I would switch to AnySoftKeyboard
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How Nice Effects Affected My Life
That’s how I got into developing Effected Keyboard. I wanted to impress people, so I thought why won’t I add flying letters to a keyboard that fly out of the keyboard into the screen. Isn’t it magical? Then I thought of making something nice, keyboard that works and will be used by all. I took Menny’s AnySoftKeyboard (which is open sourced Apache 2 License) and reprogrammed it into a new product. Effected Keyboard 2 has some features I very like. I don’t know how you’ll perceive them, but I honestly feel they’re nice.
- Is Anysoftkeyboard dead?
What are some alternatives?
Kaldi Speech Recognition Toolkit - kaldi-asr/kaldi is the official location of the Kaldi project.
OpenBoard - 100% foss keyboard based on AOSP, with no dependency on Google binaries, that respects your privacy.
NeMo - A scalable generative AI framework built for researchers and developers working on Large Language Models, Multimodal, and Speech AI (Automatic Speech Recognition and Text-to-Speech)
FlorisBoard - An open-source keyboard for Android which respects your privacy. Currently in early-beta.
picovoice - On-device voice assistant platform powered by deep learning
simple-keyboard
STT - 🐸STT - The deep learning toolkit for Speech-to-Text. Training and deploying STT models has never been so easy.
vosk - VOSK Speech Recognition Toolkit
TTS - 🐸💬 - a deep learning toolkit for Text-to-Speech, battle-tested in research and production
PaddleSpeech - Easy-to-use Speech Toolkit including Self-Supervised Learning model, SOTA/Streaming ASR with punctuation, Streaming TTS with text frontend, Speaker Verification System, End-to-End Speech Translation and Keyword Spotting. Won NAACL2022 Best Demo Award.
eo - EOLANG, an Experimental Object-Oriented Programming Language Based on 𝜑-calculus