News1 min ago
Annoyances
34 Answers
Silly things annoy you.
I watch Tipping Point as a minor distraction, but rather than listen to the innane remarks of the odious host I turn the sound off and read the subtitles instead.
Trouble is, they’re typed by some moron, too.
“Going to” is subtitled as “Gonna”.
“Want to” is always “Wanna”.
And so on. Perhaps they can’t spell the real words.
PS when hosty asks “and where do you want to put your final counter?” I wonder if anyone is tempted to tell him.
I watch Tipping Point as a minor distraction, but rather than listen to the innane remarks of the odious host I turn the sound off and read the subtitles instead.
Trouble is, they’re typed by some moron, too.
“Going to” is subtitled as “Gonna”.
“Want to” is always “Wanna”.
And so on. Perhaps they can’t spell the real words.
PS when hosty asks “and where do you want to put your final counter?” I wonder if anyone is tempted to tell him.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Trouble is, jim, that document isn’t a practical guide to how speech recognition actually works. In fact it bangs on, and might be a PhD thesis.
I want a hands-on (mouth on?) explanation.
If the input is “going to”, and the output is “gonna”, what is the intervening process?
Because, knowing computers, I know that at some point some human has written ‘xxxxx’. What, and why?
I want a hands-on (mouth on?) explanation.
If the input is “going to”, and the output is “gonna”, what is the intervening process?
Because, knowing computers, I know that at some point some human has written ‘xxxxx’. What, and why?
I don't think there would be a satifactory outcome when complaining about text/subtitles. The BBC in particular, seem more concerned with regional accents than clarity and pronunciation. I suspect because that's how it is, regionally. So the beeb, in their infinite wisdom, think everyone wants to hear a brummie/scouse/geordie/scotch/manc/yorkshire etc accent at some point in the day to reflect that wonderful "nationality". And with all those accents (apologies for missing ones), the subtitles are "gonna" struggle, aint they?
I suppose we all change words sometimes … like you said ‘hosty’ instead of ‘host’, Allen.
I like Ben Shepherd. TV presenter, Kate Garraway, whose husband has been seriously ill for months with Covid says Ben has been a wonderful friend to her throughout. He seems a nice bloke. (Am I allowed to say ‘bloke’?).
I like Ben Shepherd. TV presenter, Kate Garraway, whose husband has been seriously ill for months with Covid says Ben has been a wonderful friend to her throughout. He seems a nice bloke. (Am I allowed to say ‘bloke’?).