voicetunes
mycroft-core
voicetunes | mycroft-core | |
---|---|---|
3 | 212 | |
9 | 6,456 | |
- | 0.3% | |
0.0 | 0.0 | |
2 months ago | 14 days ago | |
TypeScript | Python | |
MIT License | 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.
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...
mycroft-core
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Rabbit R1, Designed by Teenage Engineering
It's indeed suspicious. You're sending your voice samples, your various services accounts, your location and more private data to some proprietary black box in some public cloud. Sorry, but this is a privacy nightmare. It should be open source and self-hosted like Mycroft (https://mycroft.ai) or Leon (https://getleon.ai) to be trustworthy.
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Finally! Kernel 6.6.6 has been released
Shouldn't this be Mycroft on this sub?
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Mycroft
I was expecting this to be about Mycroft the AI assistant ( https://mycroft.ai/ ).
- Ask HN: Is there any open source/open hardware Echo Dot alike?
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Coral TPU Dev Board for speech-to-text and nvidia agx as host running LLaMA??
But I would recommend writing some proper glue logic in Python and use the socket function for communication. But if you really want to get rid of Alexa, it's probably worth it to set up mycroft.ai or another open source assistant.
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Matter hasn't revolutionized the smart home yet, but AI may be about to change that - the TechRadar article claims most people don't have smart homes, just connected homes.
https://mycroft.ai/ is a sophisticated open source replacement for Siri/Alexa … you can buy their premade hardware version for $399
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Local AI -- A semi-reliable copy of human knowledge that can live in a box in your kitchen
To add home automation, consider something like Mycroft (https://mycroft.ai/)
- Using LLaMA as a "real personal assistant"?
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Show HN: Willow – Open-Source Privacy-Focused Voice Assistant Hardware
This project reminds me of MyCroft https://github.com/MycroftAI/mycroft-core.
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Is Voice AI safe?
Tldr either way it depends, but if it's free, your data is prob the real product. If you don't want to get data mined, check out https://mycroft.ai
What are some alternatives?
rhasspy - Offline private voice assistant for many human languages
rpiapi - An API for your Raspberry Pi
Leon - 🧠 Leon is your open-source personal assistant.
elastic-cli - The Missing Elasticsearch CLI
kalliope - Kalliope is a framework that will help you to create your own personal assistant.
il-keebd - USB-OTG keyboard daemon for raspberry pi
jasper-client - Client code for Jasper voice computing platform
rhino - On-device Speech-to-Intent engine powered by deep learning
jarvis - Jarvis is a simple IA for home automation with (multi-languages) voice commands written in Python.
raspberryCar - A flask server to control a raspberry pi over the internet.
J.A.R.V.I.S-project - A decent attempt to recreate J.A.R.V.I.S. from MCU's Iron Man, complete with machine learning (specifically, intent classification) [Moved to: https://github.com/Joe-Lyu/J.A.R.V.I.S-project]