Ivr: Difference between revisions
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IVR prompts can be recorded at [http://www.research.att.com/~ttsweb/tts/demo.php Natural Voices]. These prompts are not perfect as they do sound synthasised but they are good enough for home use. Another alternative is [http://www.cepstral.com/demos Cepstral Demo] | IVR prompts can be recorded at [http://www.research.att.com/~ttsweb/tts/demo.php Natural Voices]. These prompts are not perfect as they do sound synthasised but they are good enough for home use. Another alternative is [http://www.cepstral.com/demos Cepstral Demo] | ||
To standardise on all voice prompts use | To standardise on all voice prompts use Cepstral : Allison 8 khz. | ||
= Converting for Asterisk = | = Converting for Asterisk = | ||
If you have not used the 8 khz voices from Cepstral then the downloaded files are not compatible with Asterisk. You will need to convert them to a format that Asterisk can read. | |||
<pre> | <pre> | ||
sox foo-in.wav -t raw -r 8000 -s -w -c 1 foo-out.sln | sox foo-in.wav -t raw -r 8000 -s -w -c 1 foo-out.sln |
Latest revision as of 02:07, 20 January 2009
What is IVR
Short for interactive voice response, a telephony technology in which someone uses a touch-tone telephone to interact with a database to acquire information from or enter data into the database. IVR technology does not require human interaction over the telephone as the user's interaction with the database is predetermined by what the IVR system will allow the user access to. For example, banks and credit card companies use IVR systems so that their customers can receive up-to-date account information instantly and easily without having to speak directly to a person. IVR technology is also used to gather information, as in the case of telephone surveys in which the user is prompted to answer questions by pushing the numbers on a touch-tone telephone.
Source : Webopedia
What to Use
IVR prompts can be recorded at Natural Voices. These prompts are not perfect as they do sound synthasised but they are good enough for home use. Another alternative is Cepstral Demo
To standardise on all voice prompts use Cepstral : Allison 8 khz.
Converting for Asterisk
If you have not used the 8 khz voices from Cepstral then the downloaded files are not compatible with Asterisk. You will need to convert them to a format that Asterisk can read.
sox foo-in.wav -t raw -r 8000 -s -w -c 1 foo-out.sln
.. or for converting all files in a folder.
for a in *.wav; do sox "$a" -t raw -r 8000 -s -w -c 1 `echo $a|sed "s/.wav/.sln/"` resample -ql; done