Commit Graph

9 Commits (18f4ff3e901faae71351204c66a901b19eed2dc1)

Author SHA1 Message Date
Jonathan D'Orleans 99ff4e3ce8 Issues 351 - Tartarus Integration
- Master rebase
- Renaming Websocket variable from client to ws
- Resetting enclosure when ws open
- Formatting pairing skill
2016-12-17 14:53:22 -05:00
Jonathan D'Orleans fe8bb4e778 Issues 356 - Updating enclosure and wifi to use new event data format 2016-12-17 10:27:01 -05:00
Jonathan D'Orleans 184e400e9e Issues 356 - Moving Visime logic to Mimic TTS 2016-12-17 10:16:29 -05:00
Jonathan D'Orleans 4c1ba4e337 Issues 356 - Rebasing with master 2016-12-17 10:16:29 -05:00
Jonathan D'Orleans ccceb62b7a Issues 351 - Renaming metadata to data and simplifying data usage 2016-12-17 10:15:24 -05:00
Steve cac955fa64 Feature button behavior (#365)
* Several changes related to button pressing on the Mycroft unit:
- Pressing the button when it isn't listening starts it listening
- Pressing the button when listening will stop the listen
- Added a mycroft.util.signal() mechanism for out-of-thread communication
- Pressing the button now creates an "buttonPress" signal from the Enclosure
- The viseme playback and aplay check for the 'buttonPress' signal to abort
- Removed "Sorry I didn't catch that", irritating during false activations

* Fixed spacing that pep8 yelled about
2016-09-22 13:16:11 -05:00
Steve c653c43910 Added viseme support for TTS, allowing enclosure to display visemes (#357)
* Added viseme support for TTS, allowing enclosure to display visemes as appropriate

* Enclosure versino bump
2016-09-05 16:27:09 -05:00
Ryan Sipes 8f2c451938 Fixed Missing License Headers on All Files.
GPL LIcense added to the top of each python file.
2016-05-26 11:16:13 -05:00
Arron Atchison 6e42bb1736 In the 1970s computer users had to understand the arcane syntax of the machines they used. They programed their computers using the machine's native language and hardly gave it a thought.
The 1980s birthed a new form of interaction between computers and users.  For the first time computers became capable of understanding the most basic form of human communication - pointing and grunting.  The mouse and the GUI revolutionized computing and made computers accessible to the masses.

We have now entered a third era.  We are rapidly approaching a time when computer systems will understand human language and respond using the most natural form of human communication – speech.

This is an important development.  Some might even call it revolutionary.

Despite its importance, however, the technologies that will underpin this new method of interaction are the property of major tech firms who don't necessarily have the public's best interests at heart.

Not anymore.

Meet Mycroft – the worlds first open source natural language platform.  Mycroft understands human language and responds with speech.  It is being designed to run on anything from a phone to an automobile and will change the way we interact with open source technologies in profound ways.

Our goal here at Mycroft is to improve this technology to the point that when you interact with the software it is impossible to tell if you are talking to a human or a machine.

This initial release of the Mycroft software represents a significant effort by the Mycroft community to give the open source world access to this important technology.  We are all hoping that the software will be useful to the public and will help to usher in a new era of human machine interaction.

Our community welcomes everyone to use Mycroft, improve the software and contribute back to the project.  With your help and support we can truly make Mycroft an AI for everyone.

Joshua W Montgomery – May 17, 2016
2016-05-20 09:16:01 -05:00