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Learning Microsoft Cognitive Services

You're reading from   Learning Microsoft Cognitive Services Create intelligent apps with vision, speech, language, and knowledge capabilities using Microsoft Cognitive Services

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781786467843
Length 372 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Leif Larsen Henning Larsen Leif Larsen Henning Larsen
Author Profile Icon Leif Larsen Henning Larsen
Leif Larsen Henning Larsen
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Toc

Table of Contents (14) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Getting Started with Microsoft Cognitive Services FREE CHAPTER 2. Analyzing Images to Recognize a Face 3. Analyzing Videos 4. Letting Applications Understand Commands 5. Speak with Your Application 6. Understanding Text 7. Extending Knowledge Based on Context 8. Querying Structured Data in a Natural Way 9. Adding Specialized Searches 10. Connecting the Pieces Appendix A. LUIS Entities and Intents 1. Appendix B. Additional Information on Linguistic Analysis 2. Appendix C. License Information

Adding identification to our Smart-House application

As a part of our Smart-House application, we want the application to recognize who we are. Doing so opens up the opportunity to get responses and actions from the application, tailored to you.

Creating our Smart-House application

Create a new project for the Smart-House application, based on the MVVM template we created earlier.

With the new project created, add the Microsoft.ProjectOxford.Face NuGet package.

As we will be building this application throughout the book, we will start small. In the MainView.xaml file add a TabControl property containing two items. The two items should be two user controls, one called the AdministrationView.xaml file, and one called the HomeView.xaml file.

The administration control will be where we administer different parts of the application. The home control will be the starting point, and the main control to use.

Add corresponding ViewModels to the Views. Make sure they are declared and created in MainViewModel...

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