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Bringing speech recognition to the low-power microcontroller you’d find in an Arduino sounds like the work of a mad scientist or Ph.D. candidate, but that’s exactly what [Arjo Chakravarty] did.
The Bluetooth Controlled Speech Recognition Unit: This bad boy is simple, and easy to use. With the help of the free AMR_Voice App, you can control 10x Arduino compatible outputs.
That was what first caught my eye for a little prototype project documented on hackster.io. The idea is to drive or control a servo, an LED lamp or some other device connected to WiFi, using an ...
The lowly Arduino, an 8-bit AVR microcontroller with a pitiful amount of RAM, terribly small Flash storage space, and effectively no peripherals to speak of, has better speech recognition capabilit… ...
For more information on the new Arduino Speech Recognition standalone board jump over to the Kickstarter website for details and to make a pledge from $68 CAD. Source: Kickstarter.
MOVI is a standalone speech recognition and synthesizer unit with full sentence capability that aims to make this task straightforward. MOVI, which stands for "My Own Voice Interface," is ...
MOVI speech recognition system runs on Arduino shield A couple of developers in California have created the design for an Arduino shield with speech recognition technology. Called MOVI (My Own Voice ...
Sensory recently unveiled the VR Stamp module, which provides easy integration of voice recognition into consumer, industrial, automotive, and medical electronics (Picture). Sensory based the module ...
Apple has recently been awarded patents for a number (here, here) of microphone/speech recognition patents.The most descriptive is this patent which was filed in July 2002 entitled "Microphone ...