Comment by Mountain_Skies

Comment by Mountain_Skies 2 days ago

6 replies

Not really. My 1983 Datsun would talk, but it couldn't converse. Alexa and Siri couldn't hold a conversation anywhere near the level KITT did. There's a big difference. With LLMs, we're getting close.

bsoles 2 days ago

Commodore 64 had text to speech in late 80s.

Also, my friend's father in the 80s was the driver of a French Consulate's member in Turkey. His car (a Renault) had speech functionality.

  • nereye a day ago

    Early 80s (1982), according to Wikipedia:

    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Software_Automatic_Mouth

    • dahart 18 hours ago

      That brings back some memories. My friend and I messed around with S.A.M. on his Atari 800 a lot when we were kids. We would crank call the parents of other kids we knew and have SAM tell them their kids had skipped school and might get suspended. It was funny to some twelve year olds anyway.

      SAM had a basic mode where you just type English, but it also had an advanced phonetic input mode where you could control the sound and stress on every syllable. My favorite thing to do was try to give SAM a British accent.

  • anthk a day ago

    Test to speech it's trivial with Dr. Sbaitso or Flite in ARMv5/Pentium 90 machines.

  • hulitu a day ago

    > Commodore 64 had text to speech in late 80s.

    Yes, and Windows had Narrator. And that's all. Since 20 years.