Book Image

Voice Application Development for Android

Book Image

Voice Application Development for Android

Overview of this book

Speech technology has been around for some time now. However, it has only more recently captured the imagination of the general public with the advent of personal assistants on mobile devices that you can talk to in your own language. The potential of voice apps is huge as a novel and natural way to use mobile devices. Voice Application Development for Android is a practical, hands-on guide that provides you with a series of clear, step-by-step examples which will help you to build on the basic technologies and create more advanced and more engaging applications. With this book, you will learn how to create useful voice apps that you can deploy on your own Android device in no time at all. This book introduces you to the technologies behind voice application development in a clear and intuitive way. You will learn how to use open source software to develop apps that talk and that recognize your speech. Building on this, you will progress to developing more complex apps that can perform useful tasks, and you will learn how to develop a simple voice-based personal assistant that you can customize to suit your own needs. For more interesting information about the book, visit http://lsi.ugr.es/zoraida/androidspeechbook
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
Voice Application Development for Android
Credits
Foreword
About the Authors
Acknowledgement
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Afterword
Index

MusicBrain app


To illustrate how to use the FormFillLib we will develop an app that asks the user for the pieces of data necessary to query a web service. The relations between the classes in the app and the libraries described in this chapter are shown in the following class diagram:

Apps are no longer standalone isolated applications; usually they combine their own resources with data and functionalities gathered from third-party web services. Recently, many web applications have published APIs (Application Programming Interfaces) that allow interested developers to use them in their own apps. This integration can be as complex as desired, involving multiple sources. These are known as mashups. For example, a travel mashup can integrate Google maps to indicate geographical locations with Flickr to show pictures of the relevant tourist attractions while at the same time checking for good restaurants in FoodSpotting.

A list of a wide range of available APIs can be found at: http://www.programmableweb...