Date : Thu, 18 Feb 2010 14:11:19 -0000
From : mu.list@... (Mark Usher)
Subject: www.bbcmicronews.co.uk
Shouldn't the Acorn PHROMS be used instead of Superior Speech! Then we can
have Kenneth Kendal reading the news once again... ;-)
-Mark
-----Original Message-----
From: bbc-micro-bounces+mu.list=aon.at@...
[mailto:bbc-micro-bounces+mu.list=aon.at@...] On Behalf Of
Nicholas Platts
Sent: 18 February 2010 13:43
To: bbc-micro@...
Subject: [BBC-Micro] www.bbcmicronews.co.uk
Hello All,
I've subscribed to this list for a little while without posting but I'd like
to draw your attention to a pet project of mine.
I've been a BBC Micro fan since primary school and continue to play with BBC
and Acorn kit among other old machines.
At the beginning of 2008 I built a website which attempted to give a BBC
Micro a (questionably) meaningful role
on the modern internet. The site automatically takes news stories from
news.bbc.co.uk, passes them to
a Beeb which reads them out using Superior Speech! and the recorded sound
clips are then pushed back to the site.
Another fun feature allows users to type in their own messages and then
(after a short wait) watch them read back by the Beeb.
Although I prototyped this with an emulator, all the sounds are created by
genuine hardware - when news stories come in
I can hear it talking through the office door behind me :-)
Daily news podcasts are automatically generated and you can find it in the
iTunes store.
This was all up and running in time for the BBC Micro 'reunion' event at the
Science Museum in 2008 and George
Auckland featured it in his presentation, however a couple of problems in
the speech synthesis and browser
compatibility appeared. Real work prevailed and the site went silent for
almost 2 years.
...
I've recently found the time to fix the problems, update the site, and add a
couple of new features:
a) Story Browser
Although speaking has been offline, the site has still been harvesting news
stories for over 2 years. I've added
a nice story browser which lets you look through and search every story from
the BBC news RSS feed.
The ajax 'live' search feature allows you to really quickly find any
matching stories.
b) Twitter
The site will automatically tweet a link to every news story once it has
been recorded.
If you tweet beginning with @BBCMicroNews it will record your message and
tweet back @ you with a link to
the recording.
Upcoming features:
a) Ecards. Email retro greetings cards to your friends.
b) Other systems? If I can find other old machines with relatively robust
speech synthesiser then I'd be interested
in creating derivations of this site. C64? AppleII? Amiga?
Please take a look....
http://www.bbcmicronews.co.uk
I'd be pleased to know about any issues people have, the site has been
running without requiring attention for
a few weeks now but no doubt there are improvements to be made.
Thanks for listening
Nick Platts
_______________________________________________
bbc-micro mailing list
bbc-micro@...
http://lists.cloud9.co.uk/mailman/listinfo/bbc-micro