Found my licensed TinyTalk 1.67 from 1994. I'm not sure if @datajake1999 or @tspivey had already broken the nag screen
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@Jage @datajake1999 There's a copy floating around on vetusware, but it doesn't have a serial number so might not be done properly. It only changes one byte in each file. I'm not sure what that breaks.
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@tspivey @datajake1999 That probably works, the demo just had a 25 second lag screen on bootup as you probably knew.
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@Jage @tspivey @datajake1999 Having a shareware screen reader was pretty revolutionary and forward thinking on the part of Eric Ballman. TinyTalk was also the only DOS screen reader that I ever used that supported a software speech synthesizer.
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@DavidGoldfield @tspivey @datajake1999 Ah yes I do remember trying the software synth. It was... well, not great, but it was there if you had nothing else.
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@Jage @tspivey @datajake1999 As I recall, that software synth would often skip letters, making screen reading unreliable. Wasn't it called either Smoothtalker or Texttalker, something like that? I think it sounded a bit like DoubleTalk.
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@DavidGoldfield @Jage @tspivey The synth you are referring to is SmoothTalker by First Byte. It was used in the early Doubletalk units.
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@Jage @datajake1999 @tspivey I should look for mine. Not that I have a floppy drive to copy it from even if I do find it
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