Original author(s) | Douglas McIlroy |
---|---|
Developer(s) | AT&T Bell Laboratories |
Initial release | February 1973 |
Operating system | Unix and Unix-like |
Type | Command |
speak was a Unix utility that used a predefined set of rules to turn a file of English text into phoneme data compatible with a Federal Screw Works (later Votrax) model VS4 "Votrax" Speech Synthesizer.[1][2] It was first included in Unix v3[3] and possibly later ones, with the OS-end support files and help files persisting until v6. As of late 2011, the original source code[4][5] for speak, and portions of speak.m (which is generated from speak.v)[6] were discovered. At least three[7][8][9] versions of the man page are known to still exist.
The main program (speak) was around 4500 bytes,[1] the rule tables (/etc/speak.m) were around 11,000 bytes,[1] and the table viewer (speakm)[10] was around 1900 bytes.[1]