[alt.next] NeXT 'rumors' in CMU press release

ralphw@C7.IUS.CS.CMU.EDU (Ralph Hyre) (10/08/88)

[I presume this suggests that some of the CMU speech software will be 
ported to the thing.  Speech I/O probably means the rumored AT&T DSP 56000 
chip onboard, with appropriate connectors.  One member of CMU's Speech group
has apparently done some work with the machine, but he can't provide details.]

Don't expect to be able to turn on your NeXT and talk to it in real time
for a little while longer, at least.  The Sphinx system is one of the major 
successful  speaker-independent systems here, right now it takes a 3 systems
with 68020s and Weitek floating point chips.  (ie it would eat bare Sun-4's for
breakfast) There's also a TMS 32010/20 DSP chip for signal processing.

[disclaimer: I do not speak for the CMU speech group:-). My information may 
be old or outdated.]

07-Oct-88 10:06    "Maria J. Jones"             NeXT Computer System
From: "Maria J. Jones" <mj11+@andrew.cmu.edu>

(The following is the text of an Oct. 5 news release from the
Public Relations office.)

Two important computer technologies developed at Carnegie Mellon
University have been incorporated into the NeXT* Computer System. The
machine is the first to offer an integrated speech input/output
capability. And it also features Mach, a Unix-compatible operating
system base for parallel and distributed computing.

"The NeXT Computer System's advanced speech input and output features
make it easy to port speech recognition and response software without
special purpose attachments," says Professor Raj Reddy, director of
Carnegie Mellon's Robotics Institute. "While I expect that all
workstations in the 1990s will routinely have speech capabilities, NeXT
provides us with the first integrated solution to this problem."

"Mach provides features and facilities not available in other operating
systems," says its chief researcher, Computer Science Associate
Professor Richard F. Rashid. "It furnishes a basic kernel onto which a
number of different operating system environments can be layered."

Rashid says Mach's unique features include the ability to execute
multiple activities or "threads" within a single program. It integrates
communication with virtual memory management, letting the user send
large amounts of data between programs at very little cost. Mach also
permits creation and management of memory objects by user programs.
These memory objects can be mapped into the address spaces of user
programs and managed by server processes, allowing efficient
implementation of system services such as transaction processing.

Mach research at Carnegie Mellon began in 1984 as part of a Defense
Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) project targeted to the
development of advanced parallel computing. The system was first brought
on line early in 1986. Since then, the university has licensed and
distributed Mach software to more than 100 manufacturers, universities
and corporate research laboratories.

Reddy says Carnegie Mellon is working with several computer companies to
develop portable software libraries for effective use of speech
technology by non-experts.

Carnegie Mellon has been a leading speech research center for the past
20 years, and is a major contractor in DARPA's speech understanding
program. To provide rapid technology transfer from this program to
computer manufacturers and vendors, the university has established a
speech consortium. NeXT is one of the members of the consortium.

Carnegie Mellon, one of NeXT's original investors, owns one percent of
the company's stock.
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