<string>&Use KTTSD speech service if possible</string>
</property>
<property name="whatsThis" stdset="0">
<string>This check box specifies KMouth tries to use the KTTSD speech service prior to calling the speech synthesizer directly. The KTTSD speech service is a KDE daemon which gives KDE applications a standardized interface for speech synthesis and is currently developed in CVS.</string>
<string>This check box specifies KMouth tries to use the KTTSD speech service prior to calling the speech synthesizer directly. The KTTSD speech service is a TDE daemon which gives TDE applications a standardized interface for speech synthesis and is currently developed in CVS.</string>
<string><qt>Enter a DCOP Application ID. This filter will only apply to text jobs queued by that application. You may enter more than one ID separated by commas. Use <b>knotify</b> to match all messages sent as KDE notifications. If blank, this filter applies to text jobs queued by all applications. Tip: Use kdcop from the command line to get the Application IDs of running applications. Example: "konversation, kvirc,ksirc,kopete"</qt></string>
<string><qt>Enter a DCOP Application ID. This filter will only apply to text jobs queued by that application. You may enter more than one ID separated by commas. Use <b>knotify</b> to match all messages sent as TDE notifications. If blank, this filter applies to text jobs queued by all applications. Tip: Use kdcop from the command line to get the Application IDs of running applications. Example: "konversation, kvirc,ksirc,kopete"</qt></string>
<string><qt>Enter a DCOP Application ID. This filter will only apply to text jobs queued by that application. You may enter more than one ID separated by commas. Use <b>knotify</b> to match all messages sent as KDE notifications. If blank, this filter applies to text jobs queued by all applications. Tip: Use kdcop from the command line to get the Application IDs of running applications. Example: "konversation, kvirc,ksirc,kopete"</qt></string>
<string><qt>Enter a DCOP Application ID. This filter will only apply to text jobs queued by that application. You may enter more than one ID separated by commas. Use <b>knotify</b> to match all messages sent as TDE notifications. If blank, this filter applies to text jobs queued by all applications. Tip: Use kdcop from the command line to get the Application IDs of running applications. Example: "konversation, kvirc,ksirc,kopete"</qt></string>
<string><qt>Enter a DCOP Application ID. This filter will only apply to text jobs queued by that application. You may enter more than one ID separated by commas. Use <b>knotify</b> to match all messages sent as KDE notifications. If blank, this filter applies to text jobs queued by all applications. Tip: Use kdcop from the command line to get the Application IDs of running applications. Example: "konversation, kvirc,ksirc,kopete"</qt></string>
<string><qt>Enter a DCOP Application ID. This filter will only apply to text jobs queued by that application. You may enter more than one ID separated by commas. Use <b>knotify</b> to match all messages sent as TDE notifications. If blank, this filter applies to text jobs queued by all applications. Tip: Use kdcop from the command line to get the Application IDs of running applications. Example: "konversation, kvirc,ksirc,kopete"</qt></string>
<string><qt>Enter a DCOP Application ID. This filter will only apply to text queued by that application. You may enter more than one ID separated by commas. Use <b>knotify</b> to match all messages sent as KDE notifications. If blank, this filter applies to text queued by all applications. Tip: Use kdcop from the command line to get the Application IDs of running applications. Example: "konversation, kvirc,ksirc,kopete"</qt></string>
<string><qt>Enter a DCOP Application ID. This filter will only apply to text queued by that application. You may enter more than one ID separated by commas. Use <b>knotify</b> to match all messages sent as TDE notifications. If blank, this filter applies to text queued by all applications. Tip: Use kdcop from the command line to get the Application IDs of running applications. Example: "konversation, kvirc,ksirc,kopete"</qt></string>
</property>
</widget>
</vbox>
@ -224,7 +224,7 @@
<cstring>appIdLineEdit</cstring>
</property>
<property name="whatsThis" stdset="0">
<string><qt>Enter a DCOP Application ID. This filter will only apply to text queued by that application. You may enter more than one ID separated by commas. Use <b>knotify</b> to match all messages sent as KDE notifications. If blank, this filter applies to text queued by all applications. Tip: Use kdcop from the command line to get the Application IDs of running applications. Example: "konversation, kvirc,ksirc,kopete"</qt></string>
<string><qt>Enter a DCOP Application ID. This filter will only apply to text queued by that application. You may enter more than one ID separated by commas. Use <b>knotify</b> to match all messages sent as TDE notifications. If blank, this filter applies to text queued by all applications. Tip: Use kdcop from the command line to get the Application IDs of running applications. Example: "konversation, kvirc,ksirc,kopete"</qt></string>