The VAC system is a useful program which you use to issue commands to your flight simulator, role playing game or any program. Since you have your hands full while playing those busy games you can now put your voice to work for you. Use your voice to speak words or phrases to issue commands to you favorite games.
VAC uses a unique method in phrase recognition which greatly reduces unwanted issued commands caused by ambient noises. The VAC system consists of two programs, the VAC profile builder and the recognition program. The VAC Builder is used to create and manage game profiles while the recognition program runs the game profile. VAC was created from the start so anyone could build their own profile for any software that uses keyboard commands. You no longer have to wait for someone else to create and release a game profile or modify your game keyboard assignments to make the profile work. You can easily create or modify your own profiles.
• Multiple Activation Phrases to trigger an action. • You can assign sounds or speech to each action, a sound or phrase will play for success when the command was recognized.
The VAC Builder is used to create and manage game profiles while the recognition program runs the game profile. VAC was created from the start so anyone could. Serial podcast gets a sequel as Jay Wilds breaks silence. Massively popular 12-part podcast Serial. Another big builder in trouble.
• Built in sound recorder to record your own responses when a command is recognized. • Each action can have any number of keyboard commands and each keyboard command can send any extended key, characters, key combinations, or mouse button click. • You can select actions from one profile and export them to an existing profile.
The key witness in the prosecution of Adnan Syed, the Baltimore high school student convicted of killing his girlfriend in 1999, has spoken out for the first time about his involvement in the case, which was the subject of the, massively popular. Jay Wilds had refused to give an in-depth interview to Sarah Koenig, a producer on National Public Radio's This American Life and the host of the Serial spin-off, and had declined to allow his brief interview with her to be recorded. Serial did, however, about the reliability of Wilds' testimony. Photo: Serial Wilds contradicts the testimony he gave at Syed's second trial (his first was abandoned), and given that his trial testimony contradicted his two earlier police interviews it is impossible to know where, or even if, the truth is to be found in his version of events.
Wilds tells The Intercept reporter Natasha Vargas-Cooper that he lied to police about where he first saw Hae Min's body. He previously had told police he saw the body in the trunk of her car at a shopping strip, then at trial says it was outside a 'Best Buy' supermarket.
Now, he says, he saw the corpse in front of his own house. 'I didn't tell the cops it was in front of my house because I didn't want to involve my grandmother,' Wilds told The Intercept. 'I believe I told them it was in front of 'Cathy's [not her real name] house, but it was in front of my grandmother's house.'
Best Buy still figures in this latest account, though. 'Hae's car could have been in the parking lot, but I didn't know what it looked like so I don't remember,' he says. 'When I pick him [Syed] up at Best Buy, he's telling me her car is somewhere there, and that he did this [strangled her] in the parking lot. But that, according to what I learned later, is probably not what happened. 'Wherever her car was at the time I picked him up from Best Buy, it probably stayed there until he picked me up later that evening.'
Wilds has a slightly different account of the much-discussed timeline. He claims that 'between 3pm and 4pm' he picked Syed up from the Best Buy parking lot, having not yet seen the body but having been told by Syed that he had killed Hae Min. 'We drive over to Cathy's house to smoke [dope]. Cathy has people over when we get there. Now I don't wanna tell the people at Cathy's that this guy I'm with just killed his girlfriend and the cops just called because then they would all be a part of this f---ed up thing.'
As for the question of motive, Wilds seems to believe that Syed – a student in the select-entry 'magnet' program at the high school they attended together (Wilds was a mainstream student there) – was unused to failure, and took the break-up especially hard. 'From the way he carried himself, at least, it looked like he had never lost anything before,' Wilds says. 'And it was really hard for him to deal with being on the losing end. 'In that situation, he was the loser. And people were starting to find out he was a loser, 'Oh, you and Hae aren't together anymore. 3d Driving School License Expired While Traveling. She got a new boyfriend?'