Seymour Flops
Diamond Member
- Thread starter
- #21
Got sticker shock when you tried to buy one, huh?You bought an iPhone?? **** me, has someone pegged you!!
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Got sticker shock when you tried to buy one, huh?You bought an iPhone?? **** me, has someone pegged you!!
Yes, I would, actually. I just played some video of Ben Carson and he sounded like a black man. A well educated black man, but a black man. They are not mutually exclusive. I doubt seriously that he is trying to sound different. He grew up a black child and learned to talk like his black parents.
There is a pay webite for Pimsluer now with more pictures and video, but I can't vouch for it.
I'll never be as good at being woke and pretending not to be as you are . . .
She is not. Why do you ax?I just got my first iPhone. I never bothered with Alexa, if that's the smartphone version, but I liked a lot of the other features, so I thought I'd try Siri. Some observation:
The Irish, australian and English voices are much more American than I'd like. But I think that reflects reality. When I was a kid in the last century, accents were much more pronounced. Now it seems we have imported our accent, if not our love for personal and economic freedom.
There is a "South African" voice. It sounds very similar to the English voice to me, and I could not identify it as a Black South African. There are five American voices, but none of them have much of an accent. 1-4 seem to be youthful and mature American male and female. None of them sound like American blacks. Is the South African supposed to be that?
But number 5 . . . I suppose it is supposed to be a transgender person? It sounds like a male deliberatly changing his voice, which is the epitome of transgender.
So, why not have an African-American voice, which are a far larger percent of our population than trans folk?