I didn't understand the sample format so all my playback was via the phone handset. I was in over my head, at that time, when it came to grokking audio codecs.
My grand vision was to make some kind of voice-based bulletin board system.
TellMe was one: Call the number, ask it questions, get answers. Part of my normal commute for a time involved calling TellMe to get the weather for the day on a Nokia dumb phone once I got settled into the drive.
Goog411 was another one. You could call Google, ask it questions, and get summaries of search results along with answers for a distinct questions (a lot like LLMs do today). I distinctly recall standing in the supermarket looking at large and inexpensive hunk of meat that was labelled as a "Boston Butt Roast", and calling Goog411 to find some common uses for it. (It did give me confidence to buy it, and we did cook it and eat it. It was lovely.)
These things worked well for that brief moment in time when cellular calling minutes were either plentiful or unlimited, when smartphones didn't commonly exist, and when mobile data was ludicrously expensive.
Plus in retrospect I'm sure it would have been used almost exclusively for illicit purposes. But that wasn't really something I had thought of back then.
When I ran a BBS, it was critical to configure the modem and software to use signaling lines (I forget the term's name, something like the rx or tx line) to signal commands.
I'm surprised that voice modems weren't using these, as they were common with external modems.
https://support.usr.com/support/3453b/3453b-crg/chap%208-con...
I almost can't believe the USR site is still up. This is something I remember doing to run a BBS over 30 years ago. I still have my Courier with the brass not for resale plate.
I came across it a few months ago while clearing out some old junk. I did not think twice about tossing it into the trash.
I designed and built the box with the speech synthesizer, and it sat between the customer's computer, and a type-407 modem.
The Bell 407 modem was a large rack of many modems. Too pricey. Too big a hardware investment if you just wanted one incoming line. But we found something called a Tuck 407. The Tuck 407 utilized a 300-baud modem chip, and the one we had only could transmit in this mode. We didn't use this mode. We used the mode that utilized a touch-tone decoder and fed the digits out the modem's serial port. The modem also featured an input for audio, which it fed back into the phone lines. Thus, a voice modem. But the price of teh Tuck 407 was still somewhat pricey at $400 each. I only ever saw two of them cross my workbench, and they were resold to the customer.
My company built their own type 407 modem. They wanted basically a pc board level product that had the same footprint as the voice synthesizer board, so they could both be placed in the same enclosure (card rack). Eventually, that was done. It also chewed up about $30K in R&D costs. But it worked very well. It would have implemented the AT-style instruction set, but nobody was sure how to shoe-horn that on top of the hardware we'd built, that relied on extra control pins of the RS-232 connector into the modem. Several sample units were built, the product passed it's FCC part 15 and part 68 requirements, and only 2 initial sample modem boards ever made it to the customer that had also bought the two Tuck 407 modems.
The plans for the 407 modem got burned up in a fire. Almost like in a novel, it was so classic.