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UrSR: Urbit Speech Recognition

For some applications, speech is more natural than text. UrSR brings ASR (Automatic Speech Recognition) to Urbit. It consists of Gall apps and a Golang middleman, and leverages the Mod9 ASR Engine to make ASR as simple as a poke. Aside from providing the infrastructure for developing speech-enabled apps, this project also contains a demo voice notes app.

Usage

UrSR Demo Notebook usage example

TL;DR

  1. Install UrSR Client and UrSR Demo Notebook apps from ~dister-hosted-labweb.
  2. Create a group and chat on your ship to store voice notes.
  3. Open the UrSR Demo Notebook app and fill in:
    1. Provider as ~hoster-hosted-labweb,
    2. +code as your ship's +code,
    3. Chat as the name of the chat you just made (get the final part of the URL and copy-paste).
  4. Click Send to start taking voice notes and Stop to stop!

More details

To use the UrSR Demo Notbook voice notes app, you will need a machine with a mic and to:

  1. Know an UrSR provider (currently ~hoster-hosted-labweb is running a provider node).
  2. Get the UrSR Client app (which knows how to talk to the provider).
  3. Get the UrSR Demo Notebook voice notes app (which is an aesthetic JS frontend).

The UrSR Client and Demo Notebook apps can be installed from ~dister-hosted-labweb.

For best experience, create a group on your ship and a Chat channel within that group: the UrSR Demo Notebook will post transcripts to a chat.

Then, open the UrSR Demo Notebook app by clicking the tile in Grid.

For the Provider field, fill in

~hoster-hosted-labweb

which is my UrSR Provider ship. You will need to enter your +code so the JS webapp can talk to your ship. And finally, write in the Chat channel name you created a moment ago. Look in the URL when you are in the Chat channel in order to get the chat name and place ONLY the chat name in this field. For example, if your URL when you are in the Chat channel is

http://localhost:8081/apps/landscape/.../~nec/my-voice-362

then you should put

my-voice-362

into the Chat field in the UrSR Demo Notebook webapp. The Chat MUST be hosted on your ship to work!

Provider set up

A provider needs to set up three things:

  1. The UrSR Provider app on the provider ship.
  2. The Mod9 ASR Engine, a TCP server that will do the actual transcription.
  3. A Golang middleman that communicates between the UrSR Provider app and the Mod9 ASR Engine.

UrSR Provider app

On your provider ship, install the UrSR Provider app from my distribution ship ~dister-hosted-labweb.

Mod9 ASR Engine

I recommend installing the Docker image of the Engine. To do so, make sure you have installed Docker and then run

docker pull mod9/asr

To run the Engine, use

docker run -p 9900:9900 mod9/asr engine

An important caveat related to the Engine: the Engine is not free or open source software. The copy pulled down from Docker, above, is a 45-day trial. Instructions on getting a licensed copy will appear here shortly.

To run the trial Engine without CPU throttling, start it as follows:

docker run -p 9900:9900 mod9/asr engine --accept-license=yes

For more information, please consult the Engine documentation.

Golang middleman

The Golang middleman communicates between your provider ship and the Engine. Executables can be found on Github, or it can be run from source.

# View usage information.
./ursr-go -h

# Run the Golang middleman with the proper flags for your set up
#  (examples for a fakeship ~wes below):
./ursr-go -code lapwen-fadtun-lagsyl-fadpex -engine localhost:9900 -ship localhost:8080 -ttl 0

NOTE: The Golang middleman will log a line like "Monitoring events..." if it has connected to your ship. If you do not see this line, restart the middleman to make sure it has properly subscribed to your ship.

Whitelisting

Whitelisting is provided by the Whitelist library. A provider can whitelist:

  • All ships,
  • Its kids,
  • A specific set of ships,
  • Ships belonging to a set of groups,

or any combination thereof.

By default, all of these will be disabled. To add to one of these whitelisted categories, use %add-whitelist; to remove, use %remove-whitelist. More details can be found at the link above, but here are some concrete examples:

:: Make provider public.
:ursr-provider &whitelist-command [%add-whitelist ~[%public]]

:: Remove permission from kids.
:ursr-provider &whitelist-command [%remove-whitelist ~[%kids]]

:: Add specific ship(s) to whitelist.
:ursr-provider &whitelist-command [%add-whitelist [%users (silt ~[~hosted-fornet ~hosted-labweb])]]

:: Remove specific ship(s) from whitelist.
:ursr-provider &whitelist-command [%remove-whitelist [%users (silt ~[~hosted-fornet])]]

:: Add group to whitelist (i.e. group membership means a ship can use your provider).
:ursr-provider &whitelist-command [%remove-whitelist [%groups (silt ~[[~wisdem-hosted-labweb %homunculus]])]]

Useful @ps to know

~hosted-fornet          :: me
~hosted-labweb          :: also me
~dister-hosted-labweb   :: my software distribution ship
~hoster-hosted-labweb   :: my UrSR Provider ship
~wisdem-hosted-labweb   :: my group hosting ship

Questions and Feedback

Hit me up at ~hosted-fornet or come chat in

~wisdem-hosted-labweb/homunculus

Privacy notice

If you are sending your audio to a provider to transcribe, you should not send sensitive audio unless you trust that provider. There is nothing stopping a sketchy provider from keeping your audio and your transcripts. If you have sensitive audio you wish to transcribe, you should set up your own provider node and set it as the provider for your request.

Dev stuff

Project structure

UrSR uses a client-provider model, similar to the Urbit Bitcoin app. Providers will need more technical skills than clients: in addition to running a Gall app, they will need to run the Mod9 ASR Engine, which transcribes the audio sent by clients, and a Golang middleman that mediates between the Provider app and the Engine.

In contrast, a client need only install the UrSR Client app and whatever application makes use of it. As an example, this repo includes the UrSR Demo Notebook, a simple voice notetaking application. With it, users can record from the mic on their computer to a Chat channel hosted on their ship.

The UrSR Client and Provider are distributed from my distribution ship ~dister-hosted-labweb. These Gall apps have no frontend: they just talk to each other (and, in the case of the Client, to frontend or other Gall apps).

The repository is structured as follows:

  • go/ contains the Golang middleman that mediates between the transcription Engine and the Provider app,
  • hoon/ contains four directories, three of which are distributed as Gall apps:
    • ursr-client/ contains the UrSR Client,
    • ursr-demo/ contains the UrSR Demo Notebook,
    • ursr-dev/ contains the types and marks devs will need to develop their own frontends for UrSR,
    • ursr-provider/ contains the UrSR Provider,
  • scripts/ is useful for devs who wish to build the Gall apps in this repo.

Protocol

Starting a job

To start a transcription job, poke the UrSR Client running on your ship. The poke type is ursr-payload, which includes a job-id=@ud, and an action, here, action=[%client-start-job =options provider=@p]. The job-id is an @ud and must be unique to your job: recommended practice is to use a large random number for each job. The provider is a ship running the UrSR Provider app to which your audio data will be sent for transcription. The options are settings for the transcription: documentation of these options can be found at mod9.io. A recommended, basic set of options is

{
    "command": "recognize",
    "format": "raw",
    "encoding": "pcm_s16le",
    "rate": 16000,
    "transcript-formatted": true
}

for audio streamed from a microphone at 16kHz. 16kHz audio is recommended for use with the default transcription model used by the Engine: other rates will be resampled internally.

Subscribing for replies

The UrSR Client will relay audio to the Provider and relay replies back to the caller. To receive these replies, subscribe to the UrSR Client at the path /frontend-path/[job-id], with the same job ID used to start the job. Note that the job-id here must be formatted in the Urbit pretty-printed manner, so that, e.g., 1000000 is rendered as 1.000.000.

Replies are ursr-payload-type, with action either relay-reply or job-done. job-done, as indicated by the name, means the transcription has finished. relay-reply contains some of the fields the Engine replies with, including final, result-index, transcript, and, if the transcript-formatted option is set to true, transcript-formatted.

Sending audio

Audio is poked to the UrSR Client using the ursr-payload type. In addition to the job-id, the action passed should be relay-audio, with field audio, an int16 array (for encoding: pcm_s16le option field).

Acknowledgements

You can find the grant proposal for this project here.