The soundfiles I submitted earlier today have been cleaned up, and added to the Digium CVS server in a more formal manner. Also, some of the really bad formatting in my .txt description file has been rectified. All of the sounds on my website are now on the Digium site, and I will be submitting future changes via patches to Digium for additional sounds. Ideas welcome for more text; I may have another timeslot with Allison early next week in which there will be some leftover room for additional words. Short phrases and meaningful sets of words for existing applications are desired; please don't give me words for apps that aren't even thought out yet. [follow the instructions on http://www.asterisk.org/index.php?menu=download, then add this: ] # mkdir asterisk-sounds # cvs checkout asterisk-sounds # cd asterisk-sounds; make install JT
--On Saturday, January 17, 2004 8:49 PM -0500 John Todd <jtodd@loligo.com> wrote: <SNIP>> Ideas welcome for more text; I may have another timeslot with Allison > early next week in which there will be some leftover room for additional > words. Short phrases and meaningful sets of words for existing > applications are desired; please don't give me words for apps that aren't > even thought out yet.I don't know where to look to find out if these phrases already exist, so forgive me if they do. These are both used on my NorTel NAM II voice mail system for call transfer screening. Steve Murphy has written privacy features (not only thought out, but written) that could use these phrases, IMHO. For exact intonation of the below, Allison can dial 805/692-2323 and then x234. You'll hear the first two messages after dialing x234. To hear the third message, one must wait for the voice mail, wait for the BEEP, then *don't say anything* for a few seconds. "please record your name at the tone" "one moment please" "please speak louder, or speak directly into the telephone to ensure a clear recording"> JT > > _______________________________________________ > Asterisk-Users mailing list > Asterisk-Users@lists.digium.com > http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users > To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit: > http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users/************************************************************** Ken Alker ken@impulse.net ham radio: KA6SDU Impulse Internet Services http://www.impulse.net Santa Barbara, San Luis Obispo, Ventura, Los Angeles, Orange T-3 / T-1 / ADSL / ISDN / 56K / web hosting / wireless / co-lo ***************************************************************/
I just found another thread showing where the files are hiding. Thank you for recording the first two below already - greatly appreciated. Please note that the third is a new one, however. For exact intonation of the below, Allison can dial 805/692-2323 and then x234. You'll hear the first two messages after dialing x234. To hear the third message, one must wait for the voice mail, wait for the BEEP, then *don't say anything* for a few seconds. DONE "please record your name at the tone" DONE "one moment please" PENDING "please speak louder, or speak directly into the telephone to ensure a clear recording" /************************************************************** Ken Alker ken@impulse.net ham radio: KA6SDU Impulse Internet Services http://www.impulse.net Santa Barbara, San Luis Obispo, Ventura, Los Angeles, Orange T-3 / T-1 / ADSL / ISDN / 56K / web hosting / wireless / co-lo ***************************************************************/
"John Todd" <jtodd@loligo.com> wrote in message news:p0521062fbc2f94d40895@loligo.com...> > Ideas welcome for more text; I may have another timeslot with Allison > early next week in which there will be some leftover room for > additional words. Short phrases and meaningful sets of words for > existing applications are desired; please don't give me words for > apps that aren't even thought out yet.Here are some more ideas for soundfiles: - The last number that called your line was... - ...un-indentified or witheld and therefore cannot be called back. - To call this number, press... - Please enter the number to be blacklisted. - To blacklist the last number, press... - To remove a number for the blacklist, press... - Please enter the number to be removed from the blacklist. - If this is correct, press... - The number was successfully... - ...added. - ...removed. - The number you are calling is outside of your local calling area. Please dial... - ...or... - ...and the area code... - ...before the number. -cyb
John Todd wrote:> > The soundfiles I submitted earlier today have been cleaned up, and added > to the Digium CVS server in a more formal manner. Also, some of the > really bad formatting in my .txt description file has been rectified. > All of the sounds on my website are now on the Digium site, and I will > be submitting future changes via patches to Digium for additional sounds. >Also added to the Wiki: http://www.voip-info.org/tiki-index.php?page=Asterisk+sound+files+additional /Olle
John Todd said:> >... > Ideas welcome for more text; I may have another timeslot with Allison > early next week in which there will be some leftover room for > additional words. Short phrases and meaningful sets of words for > existing applications are desired; please don't give me words for > apps that aren't even thought out yet. > >John, Thanks for initiating and coordinating the sound generation. This is a good example of how a community can share and achieve more than a single person. But it does take those single people to be the catalyst. A suggestion for the next list would be "good". This could be paired with the already existing morning/afternoon/evening.gsm files to form a greeting. I did not see that combination in the existing files. Regarding the CVS... Maybe could there be an additional directory for all of the weather related stuff (like digits, letters, silence?). Having speciality phrases kept together may keep the sounds directory from becoming so large. Would also make it easier to find phrases. Just an idea. Regards and thanks again for your contributions. Robert Friedrichshafen, Germany
> -----Original Message----- > From: asterisk-users-admin@lists.digium.com > [mailto:asterisk-users-admin@lists.digium.com] On Behalf Of > dpobanz@hastingsutilities.com > Sent: Sunday, January 18, 2004 11:22 PM > To: asterisk-users@lists.digium.com > Subject: Re: [Asterisk-Users] New sounds also now in CVS >[...]> The index for each topic could be a text file with a list of > phrases with > their corresponding file name. So there would be as many > files (indexes) as > catogories (ie Weather, monitoring, etc). When an audio clip > was added it woud > be added to one or more of these index files.[...] And/or, all sound files in one directory, with a separate directory for each topic consisting of symbolic links to the real sound files. That's how I currently handle things on my systems. Daryl G. Jurbala BMPC Network Operations Tel (NY): +1 917 477 0468 x235 Tel (MI): +1 616 608 0004 x235 Tel (UK): +44 208 792 6813 x235 Fax: +1 508 526 8500 INOC-DBA: 26412*DGJ PGP Key: http://www.introspect.net/pgp
On Monday 19 January 2004 08:34, Eric Wieling wrote:> On Sun, 2004-01-18 at 22:22, dpobanz@hastingsutilities.com wrote: > > It will probably be impossible to divide audio clips into > > different directories without duplication of clips or massive > > headaches determining direcories. My suggested method of handling > > this is to have all of the sounds in one directory and createThis is actually a bad idea. While many filesystems today have binary tree directory structures, some still do not. Allowing too many miscellaneous sounds in a single directory is not only difficult to browse, it may also consume inordinate amounts of CPU, memory, and user time attempting to process the directory structure.> > multiple indexes. Each index would have listed all words/phrases > > for the topic. For example all weather terms would be placed in a > > "weather" index. Any phases needed for weather would be in here > > even if it appears in other indexes such as a "time" index or a > > "monitoring" index. The index would point to the actual audio > > clip of this common directory. > > What about using hard links or symlinks?Hard links and symlinks do not translate well to CVS. -Tilghman
> This is actually a bad idea. While many filesystems today have binary > tree directory structures, some still do not. Allowing too many > miscellaneous sounds in a single directory is not only difficult to > browse, it may also consume inordinate amounts of CPU, memory, and > user time attempting to process the directory structure.I agree, but I would have figured that any modern OS would have cached, hashed and otherwise unfolded the directory structure into something ridiculously easy to access after the first read and parse. Regards, Andrew
Perhaps someone is writing, or has written, an AGI script to fetch current weather conditions and spit it out to callers? -- Troy Settle Pulaski Networks http://www.psknet.com 866.477.5638> -----Original Message----- > From: asterisk-users-admin@lists.digium.com > [mailto:asterisk-users-admin@lists.digium.com] On Behalf Of Ken Alker > Sent: Tuesday, January 20, 2004 3:26 AM > To: asterisk-users@lists.digium.com > Subject: Re: [Asterisk-Users] New sounds also now in CVS > > > I keep noticing the references to words related to weather in > this thread > and I am getting more and more curious; why the weather > related words for a > PBX? > > What other broad topics for words exist right now besides > those that are > PBX specific and weather-related? > > _______________________________________________ > Asterisk-Users mailing list > Asterisk-Users@lists.digium.com > http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users > To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit: > http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users >