I'm not going to use this name, but it is the most accurate one.
vi21
of the same package on Flathub the main ones i had issues with was Kdenlive, Zoom, and OBS.
It means I probably won't fix bugs.
I hosted it on Codeberg https://codeberg.org/veer66/flatswitch/commit/c9f14155b3e6e6a9d0ca92443d8d827a80fd73f5
I'm not sure what version control implies in this case. Still, we can downgrade version of packages that we installed by Flatpak.
flatswitch
I love this name.
[Longer version]
Thanks to Common Voice contributors, Mozilla and @wannaphong@lemmy.ml , now we have a Wav2vec2 model for recognizing Thai speech available by training a wav2vec2 model on the Common Voice dataset. Now, I can use the model to convert my speech to text on the Huggingface website. It works accurately. I love it.
However, using speech-to-text on the Huggingface website seems to be for testing. I want to use it instead of typing on LibreOffice or Firefox. I did some explorations, but I didn't find anything that I could use.
Is there any speech recognition software on GNU/Linux which will work with a wav2vec2 model?
Last year, my laptop computer went silent after installing Fedora 35 with Pipewire.
Maybe they don't want foreigners to get the code.
I agree open source must be a better choice. However, I guess the Chinese gov't will prioritize Chinese business and acquire Kingsoft instead of using existing open-source office suites.
I'm using GNU Emacs, which is, from my experience, great for open source software and decentralized development. Last year, I found an issue in a package/extension, I could make an experiment by modifying and running its code on the fly. I didn't even need to reload the whole package/extension. So I figured the solution out and submitted a pull request quickly.
No, I haven't.