- From: Young, Milan <Milan.Young@nuance.com>
- Date: Fri, 6 Jan 2012 10:47:26 -0800
- To: Glen Shires <gshires@google.com>, <public-webapps@w3.org>
- CC: <public-xg-htmlspeech@w3.org>, Arthur Barstow <art.barstow@nokia.com>, Dan Burnett <dburnett@voxeo.com>
- Message-ID: <1AA381D92997964F898DF2A3AA4FF9AD0DFB22FC@SUN-EXCH01.nuance.com>
The HTML Speech XG worked for over a year prioritizing use cases against timelines and packaged all of that into a recommendation complete with IDLs and examples. So while I understand that WebApps may not have the time to review the entirety of this work, it's hard to see how dissecting it would speed the process of understanding. Perhaps a better approach would be to find half an hour to present to select members of WebApps the content of the recommendation and the possible relevance to their group. Does that sound reasonable? Thanks From: Glen Shires [mailto:gshires@google.com] Sent: Wednesday, January 04, 2012 11:15 PM To: public-webapps@w3.org Cc: public-xg-htmlspeech@w3.org; Arthur Barstow; Dan Burnett Subject: Speech Recognition and Text-to-Speech Javascript API - seeking feedback for eventual standardization As Dan Burnett wrote below: The HTML Speech Incubator Group [1] has recently wrapped up its work on use cases, requirements, and proposals for adding automatic speech recognition (ASR) and text-to-speech (TTS) capabilities to HTML. The work of the group is documented in the group's Final Report. [2] The members of the group intend this work to be input to one or more working groups, in W3C and/or other standards development organizations such as the IETF, as an aid to developing full standards in this space. Because that work was so broad, Art Barstow asked (below) for a relatively specific proposal. We at Google are proposing that a subset of it be accepted as a work item by the Web Applications WG. Specifically, we are proposing this Javascript API [3], which enables web developers to incorporate speech recognition and synthesis into their web pages. This simplified subset enables developers to use scripting to generate text-to-speech output and to use speech recognition as an input for forms, continuous dictation and control, and it supports the majority of use-cases in the Incubator Group's Final Report. We welcome your feedback and ask that the Web Applications WG consider accepting this Javascript API [3] as a work item. [1] charter: http://www.w3.org/2005/Incubator/htmlspeech/charter [2] report: http://www.w3.org/2005/Incubator/htmlspeech/XGR-htmlspeech/ [3] API: http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/public-webapps/2011OctDec/att-1696/s peechapi.html Bjorn Bringert Satish Sampath Glen Shires On Thu, Dec 22, 2011 at 11:38 AM, Glen Shires <gshires@google.com> wrote: Milan, The IDLs contained in both documents are in the same format and order, so it's relatively easy to compare the two side <http://www.w3.org/2005/Incubator/htmlspeech/XGR-htmlspeech-20111206/#sp eechreco-section> -by-side <http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/public-webapps/2011OctDec/att-1696/ speechapi.html#api_description> . The semantics of the attributes, methods and events have not changed, and both IDLs link directly to the definitions contained in the Speech XG Final Report. As you mention, we agree that the protocol portions of the Speech XG Final Report are most appropriate for consideration by a group such as IETF, and believe such work can proceed independently, particularly because the Speech XG Final Report has provided a roadmap for these to remain compatible. Also, as shown in the Speech XG Final Report - Overview <http://www.w3.org/2005/Incubator/htmlspeech/XGR-htmlspeech-20111206/#in troductory> , the "Speech Web API" is not dependent on the "Speech Protocol" and a "Default Speech" service can be used for local or remote speech recognition and synthesis. Glen Shires On Thu, Dec 22, 2011 at 10:32 AM, Young, Milan <Milan.Young@nuance.com> wrote: Hello Glen, The proposal says that it contains a "simplified subset of the JavaScript API". Could you please clarify which elements of the HTMLSpeech recommendation's JavaScript API were omitted? I think this would be the most efficient way for those of us familiar with the XG recommendation to evaluate the new proposal. I'd also appreciate clarification on how you see the protocol being handled. In the HTMLSpeech group we were thinking about this as a hand-in-hand relationship between W3C and IETF like WebSockets. Is this still your (and Google's) vision? Thanks From: Glen Shires [mailto:gshires@google.com] Sent: Thursday, December 22, 2011 11:14 AM To: public-webapps@w3.org; Arthur Barstow Cc: public-xg-htmlspeech@w3.org; Dan Burnett Subject: Re: HTML Speech XG Completes, seeks feedback for eventual standardization We at Google believe that a scripting-only (Javascript) subset of the API defined in the Speech XG Incubator Group Final Report is of appropriate scope for consideration by the WebApps WG. The enclosed scripting-only subset supports the majority of the use-cases and samples in the XG proposal. Specifically, it enables web-pages to generate speech output and to use speech recognition as an input for forms, continuous dictation and control. The Javascript API will allow web pages to control activation and timing and to handle results and alternatives. We welcome your feedback and ask that the Web Applications WG consider accepting this as a work item. Bjorn Bringert Satish Sampath Glen Shires On Tue, Dec 13, 2011 at 11:39 AM, Glen Shires <gshires@google.com> wrote: We at Google believe that a scripting-only (Javascript) subset of the API defined in the Speech XG Incubator Group Final Report [1] is of appropriate scope for consideration by the WebApps WG. A scripting-only subset supports the majority of the use-cases and samples in the XG proposal. Specifically, it enables web-pages to generate speech output and to use speech recognition as an input for forms, continuous dictation and control. The Javascript API will allow web pages to control activation and timing and to handle results and alternatives As Dan points out above, we envision that different portions of the Incubator Group Final Report are applicable to different working groups "in W3C and/or other standards development organizations such as the IETF". This scripting API subset does not preclude other groups from pursuing standardization of relevant HTML markup or underlying transport protocols, and indeed the Incubator Group Final Report defines a potential roadmap such that such additions can be compatible. To make this more concrete, Google will provide to this mailing list a specific proposal extracted from the Incubator Group Final Report, that includes only those portions we believe are relevant to WebApps, with links back to the Incubator Report as appropriate. Bjorn Bringert Satish Sampath Glen Shires [1] http://www.w3.org/2005/Incubator/htmlspeech/XGR-htmlspeech/ On Tue, Dec 13, 2011 at 5:32 AM, Dan Burnett <dburnett@voxeo.com> wrote: Thanks for the info, Art. To be clear, I personally am *NOT* proposing adding any specs to WebApps, although others might. My email below as a Chair of the group is merely to inform people of this work and ask for feedback. I expect that your information will be useful for others who might wish for some of this work to continue in WebApps. -- dan On Dec 13, 2011, at 7:06 AM, Arthur Barstow wrote: > Hi Dan, > > WebApps already has a relatively large number of specs in progress (see [PubStatus]) and the group has agreed to add some additional specs (see [CharterChanges]). As such, please provide a relatively specific proposal about the features/specs you and other proponents would like to add to WebApps. > > Regarding the level of detail for your proposal, I think a reasonable precedence is something like the Gamepad and Pointer/MouseLock proposals (see [CharterChanges]). (Perhaps this could be achieved by identifying specific sections in the XG's Final Report?) > > -Art Barstow > > [PubStatus] http://www.w3.org/2008/webapps/wiki/PubStatus#API_Specifications > [CharterChanges] http://www.w3.org/2008/webapps/wiki/CharterChanges#Additions_Agreed > > On 12/12/11 5:25 PM, ext Dan Burnett wrote: >> Dear WebApps people, >> >> The HTML Speech Incubator Group [1] has recently wrapped up its work on use cases, requirements, and proposals for adding automatic speech recognition (ASR) and text-to-speech (TTS) capabilities to HTML. The work of the group is documented in the group's Final Report. [2] >> >> The members of the group intend this work to be input to one or more working groups, in W3C and/or other standards development organizations such as the IETF, as an aid to developing full standards in this space. >> Whether the W3C work happens in a new Working Group or an existing one, we are interested in collecting feedback on the Incubator Group's work. We are specifically interested in input from the members of the WebApps Working Group. >> >> If you have any feedback to share, please send it to, or cc, the group's mailing list (public-xg-htmlspeech@w3.org). This will allow comments to be archived in one consistent location for use by whatever group takes up this work. >> >> >> Dan Burnett, Co-Chair >> HTML Speech Incubator Group >> >> >> [1] charter: http://www.w3.org/2005/Incubator/htmlspeech/charter >> [2] http://www.w3.org/2005/Incubator/htmlspeech/XGR-htmlspeech/ >> >> p.s. This feedback request is being sent to the following groups: WebApps, HTML, Audio, DAP, Voice Browser, Multimodal Interaction
Received on Friday, 6 January 2012 18:48:08 UTC