Real time zava application

G

Geobird

Hello java creatures ,

Can you develop a zava program that takes the real time acoustic
inputs ( voice inputs )
for a sample of 1 week . Then the user gives information of
which places and person are the
sounds related to ///
Based on these the program is able to approximate the places
and people the user talks
to or visits . It may also give response to when the user
speaks to whom the speech corresponds to :: ( It may uilize the
PTT features present in many phones )
I am sure that it will be requiring some great amount of memory .

Ideas are welcome.
 
B

blue indigo

Geobird said:
Hello java [sic] creatures ,

Can you develop a zava program that takes the real time acoustic
inputs ( voice inputs )

What is zava?

Java, obviously.

For all your useful contributions, Lew, every so often a silly post like
this one tempts me to score you down*. I think others have expressed
similar sentiments, and also about your sometimes feeding the group's
trolls.

* I haven't, though, because you post quite a lot of useful stuff quite
regularly.

On the original topic:

It is definitely possible to develop a Java program that can handle data
in real time at typical audio bitrates. I think even without resorting to
JNI. I'd do a search for existing libraries that give Java code access to
microphone input before resorting to rolling my own, though.
 
M

Michael Rauscher

Geobird said:
Can you develop a zava program that takes the real time acoustic
inputs ( voice inputs )
for a sample of 1 week . Then the user gives information of
which places and person are the
sounds related to ///
Based on these the program is able to approximate the places
and people the user talks
to or visits . It may also give response to when the user
speaks to whom the speech corresponds to :: ( It may uilize the
PTT features present in many phones )

MARF[1] seems to be a good point to start with.

Bye
Michael

[1] http://marf.sourceforge.net/
 
L

Lew

Geobird said:
Hello java [sic] creatures ,

Can you develop a zava program that takes the real time acoustic
inputs ( voice inputs )
What is zava?

blue said:
Java, obviously.

Not so obvious, at least to me, given that the OP mentioned "java" in the same
post. The presence of both words indicated to me that the spelling was
deliberate. Believe me, I thought about it before posting the question, and I
just could not be as certain as you that it was a typo. It made sense to me
to ask the OP for clarification.
For all your useful contributions, Lew, every so often a silly post like
this one tempts me to score you down*. I think others have expressed
similar sentiments, and also about your sometimes feeding the group's
trolls.

I feel as though I'm doing that now.

As for "scoring me down", I don't even know what that means. I do think that
you are both misinterpreting my post and overreacting to it. Note that all I
did was ask what the term was - I offered no criticism nor sarcasm, nor
anything else negative. Just a simple request for information about a point
that was unclear to me.
 
B

blue indigo

On Tue, 5628 Sep 1993, Lew wrote:
[attributions somehow got mangled. I've reconstructed them as best I
could]
Not so obvious, at least to me, given that the OP mentioned "java" in
the same post. The presence of both words indicated to me that the
spelling was deliberate. Believe me, I thought about it before posting
the question, and I just could not be as certain as you that it was a
typo. It made sense to me to ask the OP for clarification.

Begging your pardon, but: get real. We've all seen many sloppily-spelled
posts from newbies here, and we've all seen your spelling flames, enough
to know both types of post when we see them.

Or at least, we think we do. I suppose this case might have been an
exception.

You might also wish to note that the only major Google hits for "Zava" are
for people named that, and that the Y and J keys are very close together
on several keyboard layouts, including QWERTZ, which is commonly used in
central Europe. And that the user appears to post from Nepal, so English
won't be his first language (AND he may well be using a QWERTZ keyboard).

Being tolerant of non-Western people is a virtue I strive to attain.
I feel as though I'm doing that now.

I'm sorry you feel that way.
As for "scoring me down", I don't even know what that means.

Use of a less crippled newsreader might help you. :) AFAIR Thunderbird
doesn't provide very good support for article-scoring, just a basic
killfile facility that kills entirely or leaves alone, either by from
address or by thread. At least that was the case last time I shopped
around to see if it was up to snuff yet (needless to say, it wasn't).
I do think
that you are both misinterpreting my post and overreacting to it. Note
that all I did was ask what the term was - I offered no criticism nor
sarcasm, nor anything else negative. Just a simple request for
information about a point that was unclear to me.

Keep in mind your history here of posting spelling flames, or at least
moderate rebukes.

I probably wouldn't have even taken issue with it if your post had also
made some effort to actually answer Geobird's question.

Sorry for any misunderstanding, anyway.
 
M

Mike Schilling

blue said:
You might also wish to note that the only major Google hits for
"Zava" are for people named that, and that the Y and J keys are very
close together on several keyboard layouts, including QWERTZ, which
is commonly used in central Europe.

Do you mean "Z" and "J"? (I know the law that someone complaining
about a typo will make one himself; I didn't know that someone
complaining about someone complaining about a typo will make one as
well.)
 

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