Crimsonwing

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Our View

There are many IT specialists out there, but what makes Crimsonwing unique? With more than 14 years of industry experience and besides our combined knowledge of ERP, eCommerce and custom development, our approach to projects is one of a kind. Our offices in London, the Netherlands and Malta are close to our customers and always allow for immediate reaction. In all of our offices we have support available and the majority of our development and support team is based in the Competence Centre in Malta, so that we can offer you the best of both worlds.

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Malta

Crimsonwing is a growing and profitable company. For our Competence Centre in Malta and our headquarters in London, we are always looking for new talents to help our customers develop and maintain the best IT solutions.

If you are looking for a career in IT and want to develop your skills in ERP, eCommerce and other complex projects, then we would like to receive your CV. Please refer to the careers section to find out more about individual jobs.

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eCommerce platform

Before your customers can start shopping for products on your company's eCommerce website, you will have to decide which eCommerce solution is most suitable for you.

Crimsonwing helps with making the right selection. We can consult you and help you with assessing your specific needs. We also specialise in implementing eCommerce solutions.

Crimsonwing keeps the solution up and running.

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Crimsonwing UK
31 Union Street
London SE1 1SD
United Kingdom
T: (+44) 207 367 4300
F: (+44) 207 378 1104
E: infoUK@crimsonwing.com

Crimsonwing Malta LTD
Lignum House
Aldo Moro Road
Marsa MRS 9065
Malta
T: (+356) 2124 2121
F: (+356) 2593 3998
E: infoMT@crimsonwing.com
Times of Malta - 11th July 2011
Monday, 11 July 2011 15:00

Below you can find the content of the Times of Malta article about our Maltese Speech Synthesiser development. This project is a first of its kind in Malta and is funded by the FITA and the EU.

A company originally established in the UK is developing the first Maltese speech synthesiser, which will produce spoken Maltese by recognising keyboard and verbal input and transforming text into audio speech. The work is being carried out entirely in Malta by a consortium of Maltese entities. The release of the synthesiser is scheduled for the end of March 2012.

For more info, please refer to the latest Crimsonwing News Item and the Speech Synthesiser info page.

The company is Crimsonwing, whose Text To Speech system will include a lexicon of the Maltese language compiled from a 20 million-word corpus. The current lexicon stands at around 15,000 words. Although similar software tools have been in existence for some time, a speech engine for the Maltese language is not yet available. One of this project’s main challenges is the complex pronunciation and grammar rules embraced by the Maltese language. This software, which will have three different voices – male, female and child – could facilitate access to Maltese electronic text for readers with physical, sensory or cognitive requirements. It will also offer speech control features like tone, pitch and rate of speech. Crimsonwing senior technical architect Colin Vella said members of the Maltese academia in the field of linguistics and sound engineering have also shown a lot of interest in the project and it may therefore serve as a foundation for further research.

This EU and government funded project was initiated by the Foundation for Information Technology Accessibility (FITA), with the intention of enabling visually impaired people and those with difficulties including dyslexia and illiteracy, with a facility for reading Maltese digital documents through the use of speech-enabled software capable of processing Maltese text. Mr Vella said the development team was treating the speech synthesiser as an accessibility and educational tool. “However, the software may find other applications, such as educational games and speech therapy. Indeed, the software has also been earmarked for use within the education sector, which is also being involved in the software’s test cycles,” he said.

Crimsonwing won the project tender in February 2010. The company, established in 1996 in the UK as Magus International, set up a fully owned Malta centre in 1997. The synthesiser conforms to Microsoft’s Speech Application Programming Interface (SAPI), enabling the software to be installed as an additional speech service on Microsoft Windows XP, Vista and Windows 7 so that any speech-capable software could make use of these new Maltese voices.

Mr Vella said the pioneer in this field was Dr Ing Paul Micallef from the Department of Communications and Computer Engineering at the University of Malta. As part of his seminal 1997 PhD thesis, A Text To Speech System, Prof. Micallef implemented a prototype synthesiser that was capable of intelligible utterances but had mechanical sounding speech. Other researchers, Mr Vella said, built upon this work.

The consortium is made up of the research and development team at Crimsonwing which is acting as the software development team, Prof. Micallef as the primary consultant, Prof. Ray Fabri from the Institute of Linguistics, as the leading linguistics consultant, and Prof. Ing Kenneth Camilleri from the Department of Systems and Control Engineering as the leading consultant on digital signal processing algorithms.