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By jax
Thursday, 4. January 2007, 10:02:39
XHTML+Voice By Example
How to create simple voice-enabled web pages using XHTML+Voice. The first part of an introduction to X+V.
( Read the article )
By alip180
Thursday, 12. April 2007, 07:37:00

None of the links ("Try it in action", "scripting X+V", etc) in the article XHTML+Voice By Example work. Could anybody fix this?
TIA
By david.gibbs
Sunday, 22. April 2007, 16:19:23

Thanks alip180 for posting this request. I visited today (9 days later) and it appears it still is not fixed.
I would like to use Opera TTS for an online course. So please, is there a response coming?
dg
By jax
Monday, 30. April 2007, 17:40:57

I am sorry about this. An early version of this document were published. Hopefully all links should work now.
By Profesjonalna
Friday, 15. June 2007, 11:29:30

I checked the links and Your right it works great now! thanks for update jax
By WeirdTom
Saturday, 22. September 2007, 02:31:02

Maybe I can also share this link about XHTML+Voice Profile 1.2 here check it out-
http://www.voicexml.org/specs/multimodal/x+v/12/ you can find lots of info there..goodluck..
Post edited Saturday, 22. September 2007, 02:37:59
By codebyjoe
Thursday, 3. January 2008, 03:40:00

jonny,
thanks to you for showing me how to get started.
i have been working on extending accessibility with voice. i have been developing a web site building application for building and maintaining an xhtml+voice and xhtml mp site. the application is running my site at
http://voice.codebyjoe.com/.those of you who are interested in developing with xhtml+voice may find the site educational as well if you take a look at the source code.
By duncanbrown
Saturday, 5. January 2008, 12:24:11

Last year I was working on some web accessibility project and XHTML+Voice was a really great asset. Codebyjoe, thanks for the link, it's quite an interesting site!
By jonyellow
Sunday, 13. January 2008, 13:17:40

Quite recently I had to prepare for my studies some work on XHTML+Voice and I took the liberty of presenting the codebyjoe's site. XHTML+Voice is a really great feature for accessibility issues and it is surely worth developing further on!
By codebyjoe
Monday, 14. January 2008, 12:30:08

jonyyellow,
I hope the site was working. I found two bugs a couple days ago a PHP error and a link that went to the old soon to be removed xhtml view of the site. My errors are logged and emailed to me in real time so i should have caught the PHP error every time it occurred.
I have been using the voice site as a sandbox. Now that its live i need to stop doing that. It's time for me to be more profession about the site.
I'll copy the voice site over to my development site. That way i can fix and break and unbreak things at the development site before moving them to the production site.
By jax
Monday, 14. January 2008, 13:08:09

Nice site, codebyjoe. Soon we'll publish another article on XHTML+Voice from
Mihai Sucan (a.k.a. ROBOd).
By Jo-Hanna
Saturday, 19. January 2008, 11:39:50

i have read the first part and it has many funny facts and i can´t wait to read more on that topic, when is the next part comi? or have i missed something?
By codebyjoe
Monday, 21. January 2008, 17:06:38

Originally posted by Jo-Hanna:
i have read the first part and it has many funny facts and i can´t wait to read more on that topic, when is the next part comi? or have i missed something?
well maybe,
you need opera with voice added and turned on. then go to
http://voice.codebyjoe.com/the site has a voice interface so it talks to you and you can talk to it.
but you need the opera browser with voice added and turned on.
By jeremyhudson
Saturday, 2. February 2008, 14:14:53

codeboy, I really enjoyed visiting your site, it really shows how great a feature XHTML+Voice is. I'm strongly in favour of supporting accessibility and therefore I find XHTML+Voice as one of the elements thet will become crucial in future.
By codebyjoe
Monday, 4. February 2008, 17:11:46

Originally posted by jeremyhudson:
codeboy, I really enjoyed visiting your site, it really shows how great a feature XHTML+Voice is.
That's encouraging, thanks. I think that the site is an example of some interesting ways to use X+V. I hope that it encourages more development.
Originally posted by jeremyhudson:
I'm strongly in favour of supporting accessibility and therefore I find XHTML+Voice as one of the elements thet will become crucial in future.
I'm betting that the implementation of a voice interface will become a web accessibility standard.
By ieswk
Thursday, 7. February 2008, 19:20:46

very interesting site, i to am working on a voiceXML project to show how it can increase web accessibility as part of my degree.
Post edited Thursday, 7. February 2008, 21:08:39
By Jo-Hanna
Sunday, 10. February 2008, 14:03:15

thank you codebyjoe for the hint ... i will take a look at it. sounds interesting.
By playmkr
Monday, 7. April 2008, 16:03:23

It's a shame that the ENGLISH-speaking ENGLISH people have to say 'command' with an american accent to get the bloody thing to work though.
We say "CommaRnd", they say "CommaYnd".
I won't quote Jules in Pulp Fiction
By dougiem
Thursday, 10. April 2008, 22:36:19

I was interested in the XHTML+Voice comments. I have been working on a speech project for web pages which adopts a different, and hopefuly novel, approach to accessibility. It uses a small exe program which runs in the background, this communicates with any flash .swf module on a web page. This in turn communicates with the containers javascript. The idea is to provide tools for developers to make the speech easy to create and easy to convert existing documents. My site is not quite finished, although the technical developers help is completed. I thought you might like to be the first to pass comment on the direction I'm taking.
http://www.webng.com/speakfirst/Douglas Murray
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