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
💼
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Frequently Asked Questions
The TTS Reader converts text into natural-sounding audio files on Linux systems. It supports various file types, making your text accessible and easy to listen to.
Yes, the TTS reader offers free access with limitations. Free users can preview up to 10 seconds of audio, and logged-in users enjoy additional features.
There is no download needed. Access the TTS reader directly through your Linux browser. Just start converting text to audio instantly.
Yes, the TTS reader can be accessed via any Linux server with internet connectivity, as it operates through a web browser, no installation required.
Absolutely, the TTS reader functions seamlessly on any Linux OS, providing a user-friendly interface for text-to-speech conversion through your browser.
The TTS reader supports .txt, .md, .json, .csv, image files for OCR, and audio/video files for transcription. You can easily convert these to audio.
You cannot upload PDFs directly, but you can copy-paste the text into the TTS reader for conversion, making it possible to listen to PDF content.
In Standard mode, choose from 10 AI voices like the melodic Hudson or the energetic Mia, accommodating various preferences for text-to-speech needs.
Yes, you can choose from preset tones like Professional and Calm, or describe a custom tone for personalized audio output.
Yes, there is a 15,000 character limit per conversion, including all typed and extracted text. For longer files, consider breaking them into segments.
Logged-in users can download the generated .m4a audio files directly to their Linux system for offline access and playback.
Audio files can be up to 60 minutes long. This applies to all text converted together if uploading files or combining typed and uploaded content.
No specific Linux kernel is needed. The TTS reader runs in your web browser, so any modern Linux system with an internet connection can access it.
No audio editing is available. To modify audio, download the .m4a file and use external editing software like Audacity on your Linux machine.
No, background processing for audio is not supported. Audio generation and download require an active internet connection.