voicetunes
rhasspy
voicetunes | rhasspy | |
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3 | 26 | |
9 | 2,277 | |
- | 1.4% | |
0.0 | 2.3 | |
2 months ago | 10 months ago | |
TypeScript | Shell | |
MIT License | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
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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...
rhasspy
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New project: Grocy Rhasspy Skill
I've been working on this for a few months now and I think I have it to a point where I am ready to share. This is definitely a very niche solution but I am creating a new skill handler for Grocy for the Open Source Voice Assistant Rhasspy (https://github.com/rhasspy/rhasspy). My handler is here: https://github.com/MCHellspawn/hermes-app-grocy. It is not complete yet but getting there. With is skill and a working Rhasspy 2.5 setup you can do a lot of tasks in Grocy with your voice. So far you can create and delete shopping lists, create products and add and remove them from shopping lists, list chores, mark them complete or skipped, and more.
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Ask HN: Home Voice Assistant Recommendations
It'll run on a cheap Ubuntu box if you can't get a Pi.
And lots of people seem to like Rhasspy too:
https://github.com/rhasspy/rhasspy
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The failure of Amazon's Alexa shows Microsoft was right to kill Cortana
Here is one example https://community.rhasspy.org/
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Someone has to say it: Voice assistants are not doing it for big tech
I tried Amazon's Alexa, the top end model with a display. Often it would taunt you about new/interesting things on the screen, but I could never get them to work. I'd had to memorize things to get even the basics working. Ended up unplugging it.
However Google's Assistant in comparison worked great, no memorization, and very useful. Sure time, weather, set timers, and alarms worked great with a very flexible set of natural language queries. Even more complex things like what will be the temperature tomorrow at 10pm, simple calculations and unit conversions. But also things like IMDB like queries about directors, actors, which movies someone was in, etc generally worked well. It seemed to really understand things, not just "A web search returned ...". Even more complex things like the wheelbase of a 2004 WRX would return an answer, not a search result.
With all that said I'm looking for a non-cloud/on site solution, even if it requires more work, most recently noticed https://github.com/rhasspy/rhasspy
- Rhasspy – Offline private voice assistant for many human languages
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Google assistant alternatives?
I just found this one: https://github.com/rhasspy/rhasspy
What are some alternatives?
rpiapi - An API for your Raspberry Pi
mycroft-core - Mycroft Core, the Mycroft Artificial Intelligence platform.
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
Kaldi Speech Recognition Toolkit - kaldi-asr/kaldi is the official location of the Kaldi project.
rhino - On-device Speech-to-Intent engine powered by deep learning
Home Assistant - :house_with_garden: Open source home automation that puts local control and privacy first.
raspberryCar - A flask server to control a raspberry pi over the internet.
Leon - 🧠 Leon is your open-source personal assistant.
il-magic-scanner - Writeup of the build of a prototype phone scanner