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posted by martyb on Sunday September 25 2016, @05:41PM   Printer-friendly
from the Say-"What?" dept.

A decade ago, we in the free and open-source community could build our own versions of pretty much any proprietary software system out there, and we did. Publishing, collaboration, commerce, you name it. Some apps were worse, some were better than closed alternatives, but much of it was clearly good enough to use every day.

But is this still true? For example, voice control is clearly going to be a primary way we interact with our gadgets in the future. Speaking to an Amazon Echo-like device while sitting on my couch makes a lot more sense than using a web browser. Will we ever be able to do that without going through somebody's proprietary silo like Amazon's or Apple's? Where are the free and/or open-source versions of Siri, Alexa and so forth?

The trouble, of course, is not so much the code, but in the training. The best speech recognition code isn't going to be competitive unless it has been trained with about as many millions of hours of example speech as the closed engines from Apple, Google and so forth have been. How can we do that?

[...] Who has a plan, and where can I sign up to it?

Perhaps a distributed computing project (along the lines of Folding@Home, SETI, etc.) would be a viable approach?


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Monday September 26 2016, @08:24AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday September 26 2016, @08:24AM (#406576)

    I know what FOSS is, but where's the L come from?

    If you're going to go start inserting new letters in your bloody TLAs and FLAs then at least tell us what they mean now!

    I swear, I'm going crazy trying to keep track of all the acronyms mean, I work in an industry that is heavy on them, I hobby in another industry that is heavy on them. it's driving me nuts.

    -grumpy old dude.

  • (Score: 2) by linuxrocks123 on Monday September 26 2016, @09:42AM

    by linuxrocks123 (2557) on Monday September 26 2016, @09:42AM (#406586) Journal

    FLOSS is "libre", as in "Free/Libre Open Source Software". "Libre" is French for "free", but only in the sense of "freedom" and not in the sense of "free beer". I don't know who first put the L in there, but the modified acronym has been in use for at least several years. It hasn't 100% supplanted FOSS, though -- obviously, or you would have probably noticed before now :)

    Bottom line it means exactly the same thing as FOSS, but expands to a less ambiguous description. And also spells a cute word.