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I have used AT&T Watson for performing Voice-to-Text transcriptions for a couple of years now. It has been reliable and "ok" as a service but they are discontinuing the service in October.
I know MS Exchange can transcribe voicemails... I assume it is implemented via Microsoft.Speech? But I have read many posts that say Microsoft.Speech doesn't support dictation... on the other hand I've seen SAPI COM examples (foundation for Microsoft.Speech) that do support dictation.
System.Speech is a desktop solution that requires training, so that is not an option when transcribing voicemails.
I tried the Bing transcription service yesterday and it was absolute garbage compared to AT&T and Nuance wants an absolute fortune for their service, so that leaves me with...
Google Cloud Speech API, but for the life of me I can not find C# .Net sample code for THIS API after looking for 2 days.
Does anyone have c# sample code for Google Cloud Speech API.... By the way, this is a very new service, so examples from last year don't work for the current API.
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Google Play has Newsstand application (not available everywhere) - https://play.google.com/store/newsstand. It replaces older Currents application. It displays news/articles from many different websites/magazines/feeds.
Does any, official or unofficial, API exist, that would let me use those sources in my own application?
As far as official APIs go, unfortunately Google doesn't provide anything if their API Explorer is any indication. Google News used to have an API, but it was deprecated in 2011.
The closest thing to what I think you're looking for, assuming you want to stick with Google, would be the RSS output from Google News. You can pass an optional query parameter to search for specific topics. For example:
https://news.google.com/news?q=obama&output=rss
If you're looking for a similar service to Play Newsstand that offers an API, check out these:
Some individual sources offer APIs, such as the NYTimes and USA Today
Feedly has a nice-looking API, although I have never used it personally.
Good luck with your search!
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I have developed apps for 3 years and am now looking to build an app that uses TFL (transport for london) api calls. I was reading their guidelines and read the following:
"Distribution
Developers consuming TfL data and providing public services built on it are expected
to provide the hosting capacity necessary to serve those public consumers. You
should take our data and proxy it, you shouldn’t allow all your clients to hit our service
driectly. This is intended to reduce TfL’s cost liability for hosting and content delivery."
While I have done a lot of app development, I have never hosted my own proxy receiving responses from an api. I have searched the internet for tutorials on this (ideally specific to TFL, but general ones would be awesome too), but can't find any that help.
Does anyone know of any?
Spoke to TFL about the Bus Times and it turns out you don't need to run this data via a database and can instead have users making direct calls to the API via your iPhone app. Great news :-)
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Is there a documentation tool for a WCF endpoint out there?
We are trying to setup governance of our WCF Services and it would be really nice to auto document the list of service operations on a given endpoint.
For example: http://MyService:8080/Client.svc has the SaveClient, UpdateClient, GetClientById etc. If I was auto generating documents then when a DeleteClient service gets added it is really easy to flag that for my SOA Governance Board to look at.
I know I could write my own using the code generation tools provided by Microsoft, but I was hoping that someone else already got this idea and coded it up for me.
(Basically I am looking for a WSDL to MS Word tool.)
I just need to google a bit differently.
Generating HTML documentation from WSDL
That question pointed me to WSDL Viewer, which seems to do what I need.
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I've never accessed a web API, and I'm looking for a thorough introduction. Specifically, I want to access Google APIs from a Mac OS X application. I can successfully find similar code, copy and paste, but I really want to understand how this all works, and can not find any beginner text of the subject.
Apple's introduction to using NSURLConnection is here, and there's some Apple sample code here. Google also has a gdata-objectivec-client client library, which I've never used, but sounds like a drop-in solution to accessing Google's data services. The Google project page has links to overview slides, an introduction and example applications.
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I've spent the last hour searching for an official Google Voice API documentation but couldn't find anything but a bunch of API wrappers in (insert your favorite programming language here).
Does a documentation for Google Voice's API not exist?
If you're okay with JavaScript you can take a look at their chrome extension, it gives you good idea on how to hack something together. For instance I've found this: http://google.com/voice/request/messages it gives you a list of messages in JSON
http://google.com/voice/request/user gives you your contacts and your GV number
I don't believe Google has officially published an API yet.
You might want to refer to this post:
Is there a Google Voice API?
unofficial, but has instructions for various languages and how to do some straight http requests:
http://www.googlevoice.org/ (Web archive)
It's time to migrate off Google Voice for applications. On May 14, 2014, Google will break the old interface.
https://plus.google.com/u/0/106636280351174936240/posts/MjyncJEbzxK
Google seems to be pushing Twilio as an alternative. Twilio will be available from AppEngine.