Hello I want to build a switch for my son who has a physical disability. I want to use rasberry pi so I can set it up as a bluetooth and also do voice recording and playback
Any ideas?
Hello I want to build a switch for my son who has a physical disability. I want to use rasberry pi so I can set it up as a bluetooth and also do voice recording and playback
Any ideas?
Hi Mike,
While I am all about building cool things I think where you might have the most success would be to use like an Amazon Echo Dot. $49 then provide an API into your Raspberry using a "skill".
The voice recognition and flexibility of the dot will far exceed what you can do in the near future.
Just a thought. Again I love to build things from scratch but if you need something pretty robust and reliable the dot/API might make sense. Amazon has a guide on creating skills:
https://developer.amazon.com/public/solutions/alexa/alexa-skills-kit/getting-started-guide
The ADE (Amazon Dot Echo) w/ Alexa S/W is the other Device we can use. What say MM & EM? Google Or Amazon? The only drawback about ADE is that Amazon does/or-will couple their "free" offerings w/ having the Amazon Prime Service ($100(USD)/year) BTW I am not a Amazon Prime Customer. ADH OR GHD? Doesn't matter to me. Just make a decision, I can buy the same device.
USCDADNYC (NY NY USA)
I'm a little new to Dot but I don't think you need the prime membership unless you are going to use prime services. IE you can just by the Dot connect it to your Wifi. it may not be able to do Prime music and all that stuff but the skills you can use really have nothing to do with Prime. For example my dot talks to my honeywell temp controllers for the house. This has nothing to do with prime and connects to honeywell service.
So I think my concept would be use the Amazon Dot because of it's very good voice recognition. Take the time to create your own skill to send commands to your Raspberry Pi or whatever. One benefit of the Dot is you could use like Wemo switches (already supported) to turn things on/off. So you kind of get the best of all worlds. Out of the box you have some device control, as you find time to build your Pi interface you can add whatever functionality you like.
My mistake Amazon calls the device Amazon Echo Dot. So please use acronym AED. AAR the AED URL has some interesting specs: 1) "...Echo Dot comes ready to connect to your Wi-Fi. The Alexa App is compatible with Fire OS, Android, and iOS devices and also accessible via your web browser. Certain skills and services may require subscription or other fees..." Accessing via a Browser on a RPi3 is Slow. Q1: Is that what we want to do? 2)",,, Echo Dot, power adapter (9W), Micro-USB cable,..." 9W measured at input to USB Power Brick (110VAC) OR at the Output from a USB Power Brick (5VDC)? Q2: what is the power requirement of a AED? Can we run it off an USB Power Bank? The AED works e/ Smart Home devices like Nest devices (BTW over-hyped, over-priced),Q3: Can the Google Product? The Google Home Device (GHD)
USCDADNYC (NY NY USA)
My mistake Amazon calls the device Amazon Echo Dot. So please use acronym AED. AAR the AED URL has some interesting specs: 1) "...Echo Dot comes ready to connect to your Wi-Fi. The Alexa App is compatible with Fire OS, Android, and iOS devices and also accessible via your web browser. Certain skills and services may require subscription or other fees..." Accessing via a Browser on a RPi3 is Slow. Q1: Is that what we want to do? 2)",,, Echo Dot, power adapter (9W), Micro-USB cable,..." 9W measured at input to USB Power Brick (110VAC) OR at the Output from a USB Power Brick (5VDC)? Q2: what is the power requirement of a AED? Can we run it off an USB Power Bank? The AED works e/ Smart Home devices like Nest devices (BTW over-hyped, over-priced),Q3: Can the Google Product? The Google Home Device (GHD)
USCDADNYC (NY NY USA)