rpiapi
voicetunes
rpiapi | voicetunes | |
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1 | 3 | |
84 | 9 | |
- | - | |
2.8 | 0.0 | |
11 months ago | 2 months ago | |
Python | TypeScript | |
MIT License | MIT License |
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rpiapi
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Ask HN: Private Alternatives to Alexa?
I was working on a solution for that a few years ago with an API for raspberry pi
https://github.com/victorqribeiro/rpiapi
Here you can see I'm using voice commands to drive a car
https://github.com/victorqribeiro/raspberryCar
I mean, with a little bit of code and some 3v relays you can achieve what you want
voicetunes
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Configure a Raspberry Pi as a USB Device
Here’s the solution I built for that, with a combination of on-device voice control, and a Bluetooth remote: https://github.com/lukifer/voicetunes
Something I’d still like to add is a USB OTG emulation of iOS/Android/iPod/etc, so that the currently playing track shows on the dash, steering wheel controls can be used, etc, but my last experimentation a couple years ago didn’t go anywhere. (All the open source stuff for emulating CarPlay and Android Auto seem to be for the other direction: the dash, not the device.)
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Ask HN: What is your “I don't care if this succeeds” project?
Offline voice-controlled jukebox using RPi via Mopidy, and just pushed a branch with Mac support via iTunes/Music.app
https://github.com/lukifer/voicetunes
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Ask HN: Private Alternatives to Alexa?
I can vouch for Rhasspy, it's an amazing and flexible piece of software, though it does require some setup and tech knowledge (albeit with a usable web GUI); and it's very DIY on defining the actual voice commands. I recommend pairing it with Node-RED [0] for routing commands to devices, it has plugins for most things.
The only thing I struggled with was getting the wake-word config right: I could never find the right balance point where it responded every time, without also having annoying false positives, so I ended up turning it off. It does support multiple wake-word engines; I'm gonna have another go with Picovoice Porcupine now that they're opened up custom wake-word training for free.
I'm most heavily experienced with Rhasspy's sister project, voice2json [1], which I used to build a voice-controlled car jukebox [2], and it's been working fantastically. (It triggers from a Bluetooth remote, so no wake-word issues.)
For hardware, Raspberry 3/4 perform quite well, and strong recommend for ReSpeaker [3] for audio (either usb or 4-mic hat).
[0] https://nodered.org/
[1] http://voice2json.org/
[2] https://github.com/lukifer/voicetunes
[3] https://www.seeedstudio.com/category/Speech-Recognition-c-44...
What are some alternatives?
larynx - End to end text to speech system using gruut and onnx
rhasspy - Offline private voice assistant for many human languages
raspberryCar - A flask server to control a raspberry pi over the internet.
elastic-cli - The Missing Elasticsearch CLI
ProjectAlice - Project Alice is a smart voice home assistant that is completely modular and extensible.
il-keebd - USB-OTG keyboard daemon for raspberry pi
Leon - 🧠 Leon is your open-source personal assistant.
rhino - On-device Speech-to-Intent engine powered by deep learning
DeepSpeech - DeepSpeech is an open source embedded (offline, on-device) speech-to-text engine which can run in real time on devices ranging from a Raspberry Pi 4 to high power GPU servers.
il-magic-scanner - Writeup of the build of a prototype phone scanner