Read the statement by Michael Teeuw here.
Voice/motion control
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@MichMich is it possible to restart annyang when the onend event is called?
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@tyho It probably is. I did not look into the Annyang API.
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@coolbotic @MichMich I got something working. I combined annyang and angular (from snippets and reading de api). and it works unlimited so far.
The thing is i got it only working separate. I have to cd to the folder and then npm install && npm start to run.
It’s realy basic, cuz i am not a programmer. (i only added simple commands and i get the response i want in my browser). But it’s easy now to expand. I am working on a command to turn on and off my monitor by shell commands but i didn’t got it running yet.
The thing is i don’t know how to include it in the mirror. And honestly i don’t know how to post it somewhere like github -_- so others can help :p -
I also managed to turn my sceen on and off by voice.
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@tyho It would be good to see what you’ve done, if you could post a tutorial or something
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how does github work?
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@tyho github works as a distributed revision control and scm, so to use it you need to log an acct there, grab the desktop sync software for whatever os flavour you’re running, create a repository and then sync it to the path of your local working copy
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@sullit ty. I’ll first finish the flickr and maps voice control and then i’ll check github.
any suggestions how to add this as module?
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As @sullit mentioned, Github is a code repository, any code, or to be more precise, any text. It’s a way for a coder to keep revisions on their code, and able to publish it to the general public. The code lives on whatever development machine you are using, and you sync, or mirror it to Github. This allows a coder to work on their code locally, break it, fix it, change it, do whatever, and when they’re done, push it up to Github to store and eventually release to the public. This also allows a coder to roll back their code. If while working locally they broke something and can’t figure out what happened, they can pull code back out from the repository and either merge it back in, or just compare and see where things went haywire. It’s a beautiful thing.
And while it may have a bit of a steep learning curve, trust me when I say this, it will save your sanity.
There are a lot of different guides, both on Github as well as out in the wild about how to use it.
Overall: https://guides.github.com/
Short and sweet beginner’s guide: https://guides.github.com/activities/hello-world/