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Rampa
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Group: Forum Members
Last Active: 5 minutes ago
Posts: 8.2K,
Visits: 62.5K
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VoiceAI is fine. I have been playing with it for a bit, and following along on their discord. But Nyvox sounds as good, IMHO. I would wait for Nyvox, and skip any subscription costs. Both are in beta, so expect oddness. If you cannot wait to try Nyvox, there is a Patreon option to get the beta early.
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Sophus
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Sophus
Posted 3 Years Ago
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Group: Forum Members
Last Active: 2 Weeks Ago
Posts: 230,
Visits: 2.6K
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I think that https://github.com/neonbjb/tortoise-tts is currently a good way to create voices from text (not from audio). It runs locally on your computer or in Google Colab. You can train it with audio files if you want. It works pretty well for presentation or narrator voices or podcast style voices. But it got "too good" at faking voices and the developer stopped at the current state to prevent misuse and will not release the training code. Ethically, that is entirely justified. But it's showing what is possible. This will not take long and other alternatives will appear for free.
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charly Rama
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charly Rama
Posted 3 Years Ago
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Group: Forum Members
Last Active: Last Year
Posts: 1.9K,
Visits: 17.3K
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Yeah. For my concern, I find using voice.ai really simple, I managed to do 30 s voice animation and more in few minutes without paying anything, I find the quality of the voice really good. And it works with any language. I've tried many others tools but was not satisfied. This one is really good for me Can't wait to try Nyvox
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animagic
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animagic
Posted 3 Years Ago
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Group: Forum Members
Last Active: 2 Weeks Ago
Posts: 15.8K,
Visits: 31.3K
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An intriguing one is xVASynth. I haven't used it myself but one thing it allows you to do is to imprint your voice intonation on one of the available voices. In addition, there is lot to tweak. The voices are from games, so the quality varies. Here is an introduction:
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3dtester
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3dtester
Posted 3 Years Ago
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Group: Forum Members
Last Active: Last Year
Posts: 999,
Visits: 2.2K
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Thanks, great to see the A.I. has arrived at the voice changing topic. Definitely need to check this out soon.
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Wilby
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Group: Forum Members
Last Active: 2 Years Ago
Posts: 131,
Visits: 479
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Kelleytoons
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Kelleytoons
Posted 3 Years Ago
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Group: Forum Members
Last Active: Last Year
Posts: 9.2K,
Visits: 22.1K
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Yeah, neither of these two are "voice changers" but the crappy AI sounding voices folks use (mostly because English is not their first language). The ONLY place I see for these is for robot voices - they CLEARLY have no use as actors and prove my point about such things never replacing real people. But voice CHANGING software I do think has use. As I said, there's no voice I know of that hasn't had processing applied to it. Even the VERY early movie studios cleaned up the audio of their actors. So we shouldn't look to these changers as true AI (their AI lies in their ability to process voices in a very intelligent manner but really doesn't differ in both theory as well as practice with something like Melodyne, for example). I'd use one of those changers myself if I had a chance - I guess I need to keep an eye out on that Steam one.
Alienware Aurora R16, Win 11, i9-149000KF, 3.20GHz CPU, 64GB RAM, RTX 4090 (24GB), Samsung 870 Pro 8TB, Gen3 MVNe M-2 SSD, 4TBx2, 39" Alienware Widescreen Monitor Mike "ex-genius" Kelley
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charly Rama
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charly Rama
Posted 3 Years Ago
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Group: Forum Members
Last Active: Last Year
Posts: 1.9K,
Visits: 17.3K
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I've tested Murf but didn't like it. I'll stay with voice.ai Without voice.ai, I could never, never imagine getting this result (as non nativ English language as Mike said) and even in french, I love the result, No robotic effect on my humble view
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StyleMarshal
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StyleMarshal
Posted 3 Years Ago
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Group: Forum Members
Last Active: Last Year
Posts: 5.8K,
Visits: 14.3K
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Charly I hear you :D
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Kelleytoons
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Kelleytoons
Posted 3 Years Ago
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Group: Forum Members
Last Active: Last Year
Posts: 9.2K,
Visits: 22.1K
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Yeah, and no offense meant here, but those are CLEARLY "robotic" voices and not suitable for anything other than, perhaps, a satire. No one would ever mistake any of those three examples for an actual human. As I said, I think processing a HUMAN voice with AI may well have some very real applications when it comes to serious work, but AI voices will NEVER (do I have to repeat this?) replace a human actor.
Alienware Aurora R16, Win 11, i9-149000KF, 3.20GHz CPU, 64GB RAM, RTX 4090 (24GB), Samsung 870 Pro 8TB, Gen3 MVNe M-2 SSD, 4TBx2, 39" Alienware Widescreen Monitor Mike "ex-genius" Kelley
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