ConverStory uses a combination of the latest advancements in speech recognition and image search technologies to bring you a revolutionary way to search for images.
Launch the application on your Android phone or tablet. Start talking and VOILA! Your spoken words display in real-time across the bottom of the screen, and images start to appear like magic related to the topic you're speaking about. It is voice activated image search. Quickly and easily find an image using your voice, then save, set as wallpaper or share it to other apps. It's also a useful tool for speech pathology (therapy) and those who are learning how to speak and pronounce English. The real-time captions are very useful to the hard of hearing.
Chromecast ConverStory to big screen TVs and projectors!
ConverStory currently offers:
• voice activated image search • real-time speech to text captions • works in both portrait and landscape orientations • image pause and play controls • streaming image slideshow experience • save, share or set the image as wallpaper • swipe right to browse back through image history • settings section for customizable functionality • Built-in slideshow with local time clock (when no speech detected) • Google Chromecast functionality
Experience a new dimension in image searching
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Based on our record, Fluxbox seems to be more popular. It has been mentiond 6 times since March 2021. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
I have been using fluxbox[1] for many years now, happily. It's a very barebones thing (in a good way) while also being highly configurable — customizable keyboard shortcuts, menus, scriptability, etc. It is not a tiling WM. It also doesn't have desktop icons by default. I thought I would miss those, but have found I do not. There are options[2] to add that if you want it. So, my setup is ~8 virtual... - Source: Hacker News / 12 months ago
If you want to customize in detail your desktop and are not afraid to edit text files, awesome and fluxbox can be your option. Source: over 1 year ago
As far as wms go, I always liked fluxbox and xmonad. Openbox has its fans, and i3 is very popular. I prefer a de over a wm but I know a lot of people use i3. Source: about 2 years ago
Linux (Fedora), gvim (because it opens a new window instead of taking up yet-another-terminal-tab), fluxbox (because it has awesomely configurable hot-key support), dotfiles, chruby + ruby-install (with rubies installed into /opt/rubies), bundler + rspec + yard + rubygems-tasks + gemspec_yml + GitHub Actions on all of my Ruby projects. Source: about 2 years ago
You can use cinnamon https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cinnamon_(desktop_environment)) Should work a bit better not perfected. If you are on a potato run fluxbox imo. http://fluxbox.org/. Source: over 2 years ago
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