Mycroft Mimic: Difference between revisions

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Added mimic KDE and gnome instructions
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While setting up a Mycroft device installer will ask to build Mimic 1 locally. If you initially skipped this you can also re-run dev_setup.sh with a -fm flag for "force mimic".<blockquote>./dev_setup.sh -fm</blockquote>You can do the opposite, by running flag to "skip mimic":<blockquote>./dev_setup.sh -sm</blockquote>
While setting up a Mycroft device installer will ask to build Mimic 1 locally. If you initially skipped this you can also re-run dev_setup.sh with a -fm flag for "force mimic".<blockquote>./dev_setup.sh -fm</blockquote>You can do the opposite, by running flag to "skip mimic":<blockquote>./dev_setup.sh -sm</blockquote>


== '''KDE & gnome integration''' ==
== Installation (mimic v1) ==
 
===== On Arch based distros =====
Install from the AUR: https://aur.archlinux.org/packages/mimic
 
===== On Debian based distros =====
<code>$ sudo apt-get install gcc make pkg-config automake libtool libasound2-dev</code>
 
===== On Fedora based distros =====
<code>$ sudo dnf install gcc make pkgconfig automake libtool alsa-lib-devel</code>
Mimic v1 source: https://github.com/MycroftAI/mimic1
 
== KDE & gnome integration (mimic v1) ==
 
This setup will let you read text with mimic tts from '''any application''' on your system simply by pressing a keyboard command.




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Stop mimic with:
Stop mimic with:
  <code>pkill mimic</code>
  <code>pkill mimic</code>
'''Important:''' as these commands are run as a scrip instead of in a full shell environment its best to put the full path to each application you call, for example: usr/bin/xsel & usr/bin/mimic etc.
In gnome open system settings then go to: Keyboard » Customise Shortcuts » Custom Shortcuts » + and make two new shortcuts, one to start reading using the line above and another shortcut to stop reading with the <code>pkill mimic</code> command.
In KDE open system settings then go to: Shortcuts » Custom Shortcuts and make to new shortcuts one to start reading using the line above and another shortcut to stop reading with the <code>pkill mimic</code> command.
Create a file for xsel to store the text you want to read. In this example this file is in the /tmp directory and is called speak.txt (but you can use a different file name and directory if you like).
'''What do these commands and switch’s do:'''
'''What do these commands and switch’s do:'''


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There are quite a few voices installed with Mimic, the voice slt was my favourite. Type: <code>mimic -lv</code> in terminal to see a list of installed voices. Type: <code>man mimic</code> to see all the options and switches.
There are quite a few voices installed with Mimic, the voice slt was my favourite. Type: <code>mimic -lv</code> in terminal to see a list of installed voices. Type: <code>man mimic</code> to see all the options and switches.


Mimic is built on flite tts and the commands are the same as far as I can see.
Mimic is built on [https://github.com/festvox/flite flite-tts] and the commands are the same as far as I can see.
 
Source: https://ebenfarnworth.substack.com/p/text-to-speech-tts-on-linux