Play.ht offers some of the best AI voices to help you create realistic AI voiceovers for your videos, presentations, education and other projects. Play.ht's state-of-the-art Text to Speech editor allows you to create the voiceover according to your needs. You can use multiple AI voices to create conversation-like audio and use full SSML features to enhance your audio.
Play.ht also allows you to embed and distribute your audio files. You can embed the audio using our audio player widgets to increase accessibility on your articles or web-pages. You can use our Podcasting solution to distribute your audio files as podcasts to iTunes and Spotify.
Try Play.ht for free - https://play.ht/
No features have been listed yet.
Based on our record, fzf should be more popular than Play.ht. It has been mentiond 215 times since March 2021. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
There aren't really any models that produce realistic real-time voice. I'd recommend ElevenLabs or play.ht, sadly these seem to be the only useable options for now. Source: 6 months ago
I've used play.ht before. Very easy to use. Source: 11 months ago
Does anyone know what they are using and if its possible to get it and run it locally? I have a lot of text to voice (1 500 000 characters, 300 000 words) so using services as elevenlabs or play.ht would be pretty expensive. The quality is secondary to it being reasonably fast (got a 2060 super, dont want to run it for 4 months straight to generate all this dialogue). Source: 11 months ago
My experience with play.ht wasn't positive, had way better luck paying the eleven labs premium. Source: 11 months ago
(The biggest problem I have with play.ht is it won't do some things because "Your content violates our standards" and that is for "fight scenes" written over 100 years ago). Source: 11 months ago
I have removed limit for bash history lines and file size and am using https://github.com/junegunn/fzf for reverse-search. - Source: Hacker News / about 1 month ago
Those are the most used aliases in my gitconfig. "git fza" shows a list of modified/new files in an fzf window, and you can select each file with tab plus arrow keys. When you hit enter, those files are fed into "git add". Needs fzf: https://github.com/junegunn/fzf. - Source: Hacker News / 4 months ago
> my history is so noisy I had to find another way The fzf search syntax can help, if you become familiar with it. It is also supported in atuin [2]. [1]: https://github.com/junegunn/fzf#search-syntax. - Source: Hacker News / 4 months ago
You call it with `n` and get an interactive fuzzy search for your directories. If you do `n https://github.com/sharkdp/fd. - Source: Hacker News / 5 months ago
I do find the history pager stuff interesting, but ultimately not of tremendous use for me. I rebound all my history search stuff to use fzf[1] (via a fish plugin for such[2]), and so haven't been aware of the issues [1] https://github.com/junegunn/fzf. - Source: Hacker News / 5 months ago
Blogcast - Turn your articles into audio
fd - A simple, fast and user-friendly alternative to 'find'.
BeyondWords - BeyondWords is an AI voice and audio CMS platform that brings frictionless audio publishing to writers, newsrooms, and businesses. Free Pilot plan available!
Bat - A cat(1) clone with wings.
Pocket Listen - Reading is hard. Listen to articles instead.
fzy - A better fuzzy finder