In the previous tips, we explained how PowerShell can generate acoustic signals by playing system sounds or WAV sound files. PowerShell can also use the built-in speech synthesizer:
Add-Type -AssemblyName System.speech $synthesizer = New-Object System.Speech.Synthesis.SpeechSynthesizer $synthesizer.Speak('Hello! I am your computer!')
Note that Windows 10 ships with localized text-to-speech engines, so if your Windows is not using the English culture, you may have to change the text above to match your language.
There are a number of properties that you can use to fine-tune the result. Try this:
Add-Type -AssemblyName System.speech $synthesizer = New-Object System.Speech.Synthesis.SpeechSynthesizer $synthesizer.Rate = -10 $synthesizer.Speak('Uh, I am not feeling that well!')
Do you know PowerShell Conference EU 2018, taking place April 17-20 in Hanover, Germany? If you are an advanced PowerShell professional, you shouldn’t miss this year’s agenda: www.psconf.eu: Hover over a session to view its abstract.
With 45 international top speakers including PowerShell inventor Jeffrey Snover, 80 sessions, and workshops, this event is much more than just a conference. It is a one-of-a-kind Advanced PowerShell Training and a very unique opportunity to meet friendly PowerShell gurus, get authoritative answers to even the trickiest PowerShell questions, and bring home fresh ideas.
This conference is not profit-driven, and all speakers volunteer. The delegate fee basically covers venue, food and drinks throughout the conference, evening events with grand dinner, and workshops.
Just don’t wait too long: this unique event is limited to 300 delegates, with 280 seats already taken by the time of this writing. Visit http://www.powershellmagazine.com/2018/02/09/powershell-conference-eu-2018/ for more details, or www.powershell.love for a quick impression of last year.