PyMT is short for Python Multi-Touch, a project that is the work of several members of the NUI Group. Sharath Patali experimented with speech input for PyMT and used the pocketsphinx library from CMU to integrate into PyMT. It worked out well, as you can see from his video demo below:
Sharath Patali's Blog/Website Roll (Links to some NUI-group members)
Divesh and Aditya’s Blog
Harry van der Veen’s Blog
Laurence Muller's Blog
Linux Hacker ( Balaji R Rao)
Paul D’Intino’s Orion
Seth Sandler (Cerupcat)
Sparsh-I Team
Tommy’s MT Blog
Matthieu Virbel on Vimeo NUI Group on Vimeo
Comment:
The reason I'm putting together resources about Python, multi-touch, and games is that I hope to facilitate an exchange between two of the schools I serve as a school psychologist.
Both of the schools are on the same campus. One is a high school for technology and the arts, and one is a program for teens and young adults who have severe disabilities, including autism. Next semester, one of the computer teachers will be teaching a game programming class using Python for a class of graduating seniors, and if all goes well, perhaps some of the students will create a game for the students with disabilities that would work well on a SMARTboard.
Even better: It would be great if the pre-engineering students could build a multi-touch table or two for the students with disabilities, running games in PyMT that the computer students create!
posted by Lynn Marentette at 8:49 PM on Dec 20, 2009
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