Don't Make Me Use My Electrical Engineer Voice

Don't Make Me Use My Electrical Engineer Voice
Author: Profession Humor
Publisher:
Total Pages: 122
Release: 2019-06-18
Genre:
ISBN: 9781074626778

This funny gag gift notebook journal for Electrical Engineer professionals or students, "Don't Make Me Use My Electrical Engineer Voice," makes a hilarious gift that will surely get a big laugh from your beloved Electrical Engineer. Makes a perfect Thank You appreciation gift for birthdays, Christmas, retirement or as a graduation present for new grads. 6 x 9 inch, 120 Pages. This notebook has a mix of blank sketch pages on one side for sketching & drawing and ruled lined pages on the other for writing. Convenient size to carry with you on the go.

Make: Electronics

Make: Electronics
Author: Charles Platt
Publisher:
Total Pages: 352
Release: 2015-09-07
Genre: Science
ISBN: 9781680450262

"A hands-on primer for the new electronics enthusiast"--Cover.

Sound Mind, Sound Body

Sound Mind, Sound Body
Author: Kenneth R. Pelletier
Publisher: Simon and Schuster
Total Pages: 328
Release: 1995-06
Genre: Health & Fitness
ISBN: 0684802511

In this dramatic new approach to understanding personal health, Dr. Pelletier shows how lifelong good health is far more dependent on a positive, purposeful life orientation than on aerobic workouts and rigid low-fat diets. Sound Mind, Sound Body offers practical, effective techniques to help anyone achieve physical, mental, and emotional equilibrium and enjoy a lifetime of optimal health.

The Voice in the Machine

The Voice in the Machine
Author: Roberto Pieraccini
Publisher: MIT Press
Total Pages: 355
Release: 2012
Genre: Computers
ISBN: 0262016850

An examination of more than sixty years of successes and failures in developing technologies that allow computers to understand human spoken language. Stanley Kubrick's 1968 film 2001: A Space Odyssey famously featured HAL, a computer with the ability to hold lengthy conversations with his fellow space travelers. More than forty years later, we have advanced computer technology that Kubrick never imagined, but we do not have computers that talk and understand speech as HAL did. Is it a failure of our technology that we have not gotten much further than an automated voice that tells us to "say or press 1"? Or is there something fundamental in human language and speech that we do not yet understand deeply enough to be able to replicate in a computer? In The Voice in the Machine, Roberto Pieraccini examines six decades of work in science and technology to develop computers that can interact with humans using speech and the industry that has arisen around the quest for these technologies. He shows that although the computers today that understand speech may not have HAL's capacity for conversation, they have capabilities that make them usable in many applications today and are on a fast track of improvement and innovation. Pieraccini describes the evolution of speech recognition and speech understanding processes from waveform methods to artificial intelligence approaches to statistical learning and modeling of human speech based on a rigorous mathematical model--specifically, Hidden Markov Models (HMM). He details the development of dialog systems, the ability to produce speech, and the process of bringing talking machines to the market. Finally, he asks a question that only the future can answer: will we end up with HAL-like computers or something completely unexpected?