Jasonong

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Wednesday, 18 November 2009

Getting Hyped-Up Over HSBB

Posted on 08:44 by Unknown

There’s so much buzz around HSBB (High-Speed Broadband) in Malaysia lately that I can’t help but write a blog post here.

Word has it that HSBB residential customers would be offered download speeds between 10Mbps and 100Mbps. These speeds are unheard of for residential “broadband” users in Malaysia and should get a lot of people excited — me included.

For years, Malaysian broadband users have been lamenting over the poor speeds. Being one of the early Streamyx adopters, I had my fair share of complaints.

The fact is the law of physics also plays a role here. The copper lines can only do so much. As they say, wired-broadband in Malaysia will never progress much until something is done to the last mile.

And indeed, certain prime areas will finally see something done to that tune. These areas will have fiber connection to their premises or homes.

Triple-Play to the Forefront

Data services is only part of the HSBB equation.

TM, the sole HSBB provider is aiming to offer triple-play services (voice telephony, data, IPTV), made possible by the FTTx (Fiber-to-the-X) technology. Triple-play is something new to the general Malaysian consumers.

Quite possibly in the future, we could have a new Astro alternative when TM’s IPTV offering comes into reality. With IPTV, residential users can look forward to Full HD programming.

For a peek of what the home of the future (enabled by HSBB) is, check out TM’s Digital Home.

International Bandwidth Capacity

All the speed advantages promised by HSBB will come to zilch if our international Internet lines are still choked up.

Let’s face it, a bulk of the traffic is international traffic. As the international bandwidth capacity is being gradually increased, we could see stricter fair-usage mechanisms to be put in place.

HSBB Roll-Out

HSBB is due to be launched at the end of Q1 2010. Residents from Bangsar, Taman Tun Dr Ismail, Subang Jaya and Shah Alam will be amongst the first to experience HSBB.

In the past weeks, the TM guys were seen stringing fiber cables along the existing telephone poles in Bangsar.

The picture below is the pole just behind my house. Notice the aerial fiber distribution box that is marked with a TM logo and FTTH (Fiber-to-the-Home). Click to see larger picture.

FTTH

FTTH Splitter

With the residential infrastructure already in place in the key areas, HSBB looks set to see the light of day!

Now, the big question: How much would subscribing to HSBB cost?

Technorati tags: tm, hsbb, broadband, ftth, fttx, triple play, bangsar
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Posted in Broadband | No comments

Thursday, 22 January 2009

Introducing SpeechPlayer

Posted on 23:47 by Unknown

I’d like to take this opportunity to introduce a nifty text-to-speech (TTS) application that I’ve been working on for the past few months. The application is called SpeechPlayer and is near final release. You can download the beta today and give it a try.

(UPDATE 06/2009: Version 1.0 has been released.)

Why SpeechPlayer?

PortalGroove SpeechPlayer There are tons of TTS apps in the market — some free and most of them shareware. Some of them give you a browser plug-in and with a press of a button…voila!…the web page speaks!

Others require you to copy a piece of text into the clipboard or into the TTS application window for the text to be read out aloud. The TTS application window will then “highlight” the word that is “spoken” out. Great but then when you want to do some multitasking like switching to your browser window to view other stuff, the TTS window is obliterated and basically, the word-highlighting visual cue provided by the TTS application is hidden from the user.

Though not necessary, having some form of visual cue is useful as not all words pronounced by the TTS voice will be correct. Although text-to-speech technology has improved over the years, it’s still far from perfect.

SpeechPlayer closed captioning feature

SpeechPlayer is not much any different from other TTS app; it can read most text files directly, or read text inside the Windows clipboard.

caption-window

In SpeechPlayer, I introduce something which is similar to closed caption, or subtitles, or even news ticker bar on your TV (see image above).

When SpeechPlayer is reading a piece of text, it will display the words being read on a little semi-transparent strip at the bottom of the screen. This allows the user to continue working on other stuff while being able to listen and yet, still able to view the spoken text. I’m using SpeechPlayer regularly and I find it greatly enhances productivity!

SpeechPlayer export capabilities

SpeechPlayer can also export the speech in the TTS voice of your choice to an audio file like WAV or MP3. You can then transfer the audio files to your portable MP3 player and take them with you to the gym for example.

I’ve also included a feature where you can embed the speech transcript into the MP3 file (i.e. as MP3 lyrics). Some MP3 players are capable of displaying these “lyrics” — which is again, useful — as it complements the listening experience.

SpeechPlayer also features a convenient one-click export to iTunes playlist. From iTunes, you can then sync the playlist with your iPod.

Releases

There are two versions to SpeechPlayer — a shareware version and a freeware version. The shareware version ($19.95) comes with all the bells and whistles, and features a 15-day free trial.

On the other hand, the freeware version only provides basic functionality (e.g. no caption appearance customization and export features) but has no time restriction.

Give it a try!

  • Download the application
  • Get additional voices
Technorati tags: tts, text-to-speech, screen reader
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Posted in Software | No comments
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