
So, you run back to the first body guard, hand him your first passphrase, and the process repeats until you’re done for the day. You can run in and out of the door to do what you need with that new phrase, but after a certain amount of time he scratches that phrase off the list.

(Missed getting coffee that morning I suppose.) This one wants your second phrase, and after validating it’s good, the second bodyguard starts a stopwatch. Now you meet the second bodyguard, who is much meaner than first one. He then calls up on his two-way radio and gets a new, second secret phrase, with instructions to a second door. The bodyguard looks at the list, sees that secret phrase beside your name, and nods. The secret phrase is ‘crustless frozen peanut butter sandwiches’.” You can keep doing this as many times as you like, and you’re still not going into that door.īut provide the correct “secret phrase” (or, in our case, key) and the interaction goes like this: Strange look on the bodyguard’s face, and he says “Huh?” or “Grrrr” (or roars like Chewbacca). Knocking on the door with no credentials or invalid credentials. If we were to pretend the web service was a door with a really cool VIP in the back and a bodyguard watching it, the interaction might go like this: Talking to the Text-to-Speech API is pretty easy once you know the basics.

Microsoft azure speech to text api examples how to#
Telling a system at the back end who you are, and knowing how to communicate with it, is very critical before you can do anything fun! Could you spend a little bit of time and show me how to authenticate to the service?Īuthentication is one of the biggest pieces you’ll want to learn.

I’m just starting to learn how to use REST and PowerShell. I was reading up on the REST API for the Text-to-Speech component of Cognitive Services. Summary: You can use Windows PowerShell to authenticate to the Text-to-Speech REST API.
