- The Bell
Telephone Laboratory's
Voder (abbreviation of
Voice Operating Demonstrator) was the
first attempt to
electronically synthesize human speech by...
-
electronic musical instrument. The
decoder portion of the vocoder,
called a
voder, can be used
independently for
speech synthesis. The
human voice consists...
-
pages 23–24. More
information about Dudley's
VOCODER Sound clips of
VODER speaking Photograph of
VODER at 1939 Worlds' Fair Bell Labs
Speech Synthesis kit...
- device, or codec, and the
Voder, the
first electronic speech synthesizer, were
developed and
demonstrated by
Homer Dudley, the
Voder being demonstrated at...
-
begins work on the
Voder, the
first electronic speech synthesizer. 1939
March 21
Invention Dudley is
granted a
patent for the
Voder, US
patent 2151091...
- wören oetvloeögen de aaulen,
Wente se vödynge
vynden wolden Wieldat ze
voder vînnen
wollen Vor ere
yungen tho huß in deme neste, Veur iêre
jongen touhoes...
-
recreate speech. In the 1930s, an
engineer named Holmer Dudley invented the
VODER (Voice
Operated Demonstrator), an electro-mechanical
device which generated...
-
telecommunications and
military applications.
Early examples include Bell Labs'
Voder (1937–8).
Composers began applying the
concept of
subtractive synthesis...
-
robot that talked,
differentiated colors, and
smoked cigarettes. Bell Labs'
Voder, a keyboard-operated
speech synthesizer, was
demonstrated at the fair. Other...
- were
several telecommunications exhibits,
including one
exhibit about the
Voder electronic-voice synthesizer.
Business Systems and
Insurance Building Eric...