Step 1:
Create a WAV file.
If you already have a wav file that you wish
to use, skip to step 2.
Create PCM-encoded WAV files at an 8KHz
sampling rate with 16-bit resolution, mono.
Any multimedia board which is
SoundBlaster(tm) 16 compatible will support this format. To
achieve the best quality, record with these settings. If your
audio equipment does not support this format, use a conversion
utilities such as Cool Edit or SoundForge for converting to the
necessary format.
Step 2:
Convert to TrueSpeech.
To convert PCM-encoded WAV files to
TrueSpeech WAV files, use the Microsoft Sound System in Windows 95
or NT.
In Sound Recorder:
1. Select Open from the File menu. Select
the desired WAV file, and click OK.
2. Select Save As from the File menu.
3. Click Change to display the Sound Selection dialog box.
4. Select DSP Group TrueSpeech(TM) from the Format list box, and
click OK.
5. Specify a new Filename, if desired, and click OK.
The new file is encoded in the TrueSpeech
format with a compression rate of 15x.
For those who are using Windows 3.11 or a
Macintosh, a TrueSpeech
conversion utility may be downloaded from this site. This
conversion utility will accept PCM-encoded WAV files only if
sampled at 8KHz/16-bit PCM format.
Step 3:
Create a Text File.
Use a standard text editor such as Notepad
and give this file a TSP extension. This is done so the browser
launches the TrueSpeech Player when a TrueSpeech-encoded WAV file
is about to be transmitted. The TSP file associated with a
TrueSpeech-encoded WAV file should contain the following
(case-sensitive) HTML line:
TSIP>>URL/*.wav
The URL above should not include the
"http://" characters. For example, www.dspg.com would be
appropriate and http://www.dspg.com would not.
Let's suppose you create a PCM-encoded WAV
file and convert it to TrueSpeech. Give this file the name
test.wav. Next, suppose that this file is located at your server
in the directory www.home.com/audio. It is now necessary to create
a one line .tsp text file. This file should contain the following
line:
TSIP>>www.home.com/audio/test.wav
You can simply name this file test.tsp
Step 4:
Link.
Link the *.tsp text file to any image or
text you specify on your page. When a visitor clicks on this link,
the TrueSpeech Player starts. Upon spawning the player, the
TrueSpeech Player reads the location of the TrueSpeech *.wav file
from the *.tsp file. The Player then accesses and plays the file
as it is being downloaded, in real time.
To Listen to TrueSpeech files you can
download the player from the TrueSpeech
home page.
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