Hello, from 2012-present for telephones with answering machines and not a Digital Voice phone, the answering machine voice is text-to-speech and is called Amy, I hope anyone here knows a bit about it and has managed to replicate it somehow. And can anyone give me information about when it was created, how it was created and the first phone to use this voice. Hopefully someone here (like a creator of a BT phone) can respond or a BT admin can respond and pass me onto the right team. Thank you
May be worth looking here http://www.samhallas.co.uk/telecomms.htm
Thank you, unfortunately that didn’t seem to have the information I was looking for, by the way it is this I’m referring to: https://www.mediafire.com/file/q4tuxbdzfmddsx2/ScreenRecording_12-30-2024_13-49-33_1.mp3/file
That is just the default message stored on many answering machines.
I know, which in my original request is what I’m asking about.
Perhaps https://www.narakeet.com/text-to-speech/voice/amy-text-to-speech-voice/
Just alter the text in the box to match the dialogue.
Thank you, it doesn’t seem that this works though as it sounds a lot more natural in the website than it does on the answering machine. I’m thinking maybe the one on the answering machine is an older version of it? I can’t seem to find any websites hosting the voice where it sounds exact.
Bear in mind that on an answering machine there is very little fixed memory space in the firmware, so any recording is likely to be reduced to a low 8 bit sample rate. A better quality would be pointless over a telephony channel.
The Microsoft TTS tool can create 8 bit mono, but does not include the Amy voice, but uses Hazel.
Thread moved to Lounge.