It is important to set the environment variables $JAVA_HOME, $M2_HOME and the $PATH to the correct values (export in /Users/mbarnig/.bash-profile). On Mac, Java is installed in /Library/Java/JavaVirtualMachines/jdk1.8.0_31.jdk/Contents/Home/Īnd Maven is installed in /usr/local/apache-maven/apache-maven-3.2.5
#Mary tts voices software
To compile Mary TTS from source on the Mac, the latest JAVA development version (jdk-8u31-macosx-圆4.dmg) and Apache Maven (apache-maven-3.2.), a software project management and comprehension tool, are required. After unzipping, the source code was placed in the folder marytts-master on the desktop. On Windows, the related scripts are marytts-server.bat and marytts-client.bat.Īs the development version 5.2 of Mary TTS supports more languages and comes with toolkits for quickly adding support for new languages and for building unit selection and HMM-based synthesis voices, I downloaded a snapshot-zip-file from Github with the most recent source code. > Now Im trying to build another voice with the same wav files in their > original sampling rate (22050Hz).
#Mary tts voices install
To start the Mary TTS client with the related GUI, a second terminal window is opened in the same folder with the command : marytss-5.1.2 mbarnig$ bin/marytts-client.sh On 05:52 AM, Anderson de Oliveira Monte wrote: > Hello, > I was able to build and install in MARY TTS a Brazilian Portuguese HMM > Voice using wav files that were downsampled to 16000Hz. The Mary TTS Server is started first by opening a terminal window in the folder marytts-5.1 with the following command : marytss-5.1.2 mbarnig$ bin/marytts-server.sh On the Mac (OSX 10.10 Yosemite), version 5.1.2 of Mary TTS was placed on the desktop in the folders marytts-5.1.2 and marytts-builder-5.1.2. I installed Mary TTS on my Windows, Linux and Mac computers. The current stable version is 5.2, released on September 15, 2016. The earliest version of MaryTTS was developed around 2000 by Marc Schröder. Mary stands for Modular Architecture for Research in s Yynthesis. It is now maintained by the Multimodal Speech Processing Group in the Cluster of Excellence MMCI and DFKI (Deutsches Forschungszentrum für Künstliche Intelligenz GmbH). It was originally developed as a collaborative project of DFKI’s Language Technology Lab and the Institute of Phonetics at Saarland University. MaryTTS is an open-source, multilingual Text-to-Speech Synthesis platform written in Java.