Microsoft pitches voice spec

Published: 12 July 2003 y., Saturday
Microsoft has welcomed a new addition to its server family: the Speech Server. Running on Windows Server 2003, the first public beta of Speech Server will ship with Beta 3 of Microsoft’s Speech Application SDK (Software Development Kit) in what signals speech technology’s return to the corporate agenda. Due for manufacturing release before mid-2004, the product will include a text-to-speech engine from SpeechWorks — Microsoft’s own speech-recognition engine — and a telephony interface manager. The offering will also include middleware that is being designed in partnership with Santa Clara, Calif.-based Intel and Dallas-based Intervoice to connect the Microsoft product to an enterprise telephony infrastructure. But it is the server’s SALT (Speech Application Language Tags) voice browser that sets Microsoft apart from the standards crowd. Rather than adhering to VXML (Voice XML) — the current W3C standard for developing speech-based telephony applications — Speech Server is compatible only with applications that use the specifications developed by the SALT Forum, of which Microsoft is a founding member. The SALT Forum has submitted its specifications to a W3C working group, but they are far from becoming a standard. The SALT specification was originally targeted at the multimodal market for browsing the Web on handheld devices. The theory was that users required multiple ways to interface with smaller devices and that voice would be chief among them, but the market for multimodal handhelds has not materialized.
Šaltinis: infoworld.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

Croatia ahead of most EU countries in m-payment implementation

Croatia is among the European leaders in the implementation of mobile payments, according to a recent global study of the sector by Arthur D Little, the world’s first management consulting firm more »

RUSSIA GETS BUSINESS SAVVY SEARCH ENGINE

It is now possible to search Russia for offers or bids to sell or buy businesses via the Internet, by means of a special search engine called "Investor Searcher" more »

Torvalds Criticizes Security Approaches

Linux creator Linus Torvalds had a few things to say this week about the way potential security issues are disclosed to fellow open sourcers more »

Considerable growth

NUMBER OF INTERNET USERS REACHES 675,000, MOBILE USERS 544,100 more »

British Airways introduces online check-in

British Airways has launched a new Internet site, making it easier and quicker for customers to find what they need at the click of a button more »

The Internet Story

The Internet has been around for much longer than most people think, with its roots able to be traced back to the 1960s. Clear goals have driven some, whilst others have become household names almost by accident. Find fascinating facts on a phenomenon that has changed communication to an extent which was previously totally unimaginable. more »

HP shifts last of Itanium work to Intel

Hewlett-Packard and Intel designed the Itanium chip together, but HP is handing the project over more »

An Agreement

Internet Will be Provided to 300 Remote Villages of Lithuania more »

EU threatens legal action over IT regulation

The European Commission is to warn eight European Union member states to bring their regulatory regimes for electronic communications into line with common standards or face legal action in the Court of Justice more »