About us
English
Turn your text into a natural voice
Transform your text into an engaging podcast recording
Turn your text into a compelling story
Voice
Xavier
Tone
💼
By using the product, you agree to our Terms of Service and have read our Privacy Policy.
Trusted by Millions Worldwide
4.4
2,100+ reviews on G2
4.4
8,200+ reviews on Capterra
4.4
73,000+ reviews on App Store
248M
Registered Users
5B
Notes Created
2M
Notes Created Daily
Frequently Asked Questions
This tool converts text into natural-sounding audio files. You can upload text or choose from files to create downloadable audio using AI voices.
Yes, the tool works seamlessly on Ubuntu 20.04. Simply access it through your browser without any installation needed.
Navigate to the webpage via your Ubuntu system. You can begin typing text or uploading files directly to convert them to audio.
Yes, logged-in users on Ubuntu can download the generated audio files in .m4a format to their devices for offline playback.
Xavier offers a balanced, neutral delivery that sounds highly realistic. Hudson provides a melodic, smooth flow ideal for storytelling.
Yes, you can use the tool for free on Ubuntu to preview audio up to 10 seconds. Full audio generation is available for logged-in users.
Absolutely, it functions smoothly in browsers available on Ubuntu, such as Firefox and Chrome, giving you full platform compatibility.
Yes, in Standard mode, you can craft custom tones by describing your desired style, allowing personalized audio output on Ubuntu.
Text formats like .txt, image formats such as .jpg, and media formats like .mp3 for transcription are supported, making it versatile on Ubuntu.
Yes, there is a maximum limit of 15,000 characters per conversion, combining both typed and uploaded text.
Yes, you can mix typed text with uploaded files, giving you flexibility in content creation and order arrangement for audio synthesis.
Uploaded audio or video files can be up to 60 minutes long, allowing robust content conversion, but ensuring edit-ready generation.
No, the service requires an internet connection for AI processing. However, downloaded audio plays offline on any Ubuntu audio player.
Yes, the tool currently supports .m4a format only, optimizing file size and quality for easy playback on Ubuntu devices.
While not designed explicitly for signal improvement, the resulting audio is natural-sounding, thanks to advanced AI voice manipulation.