![]() The goal of instruction of any kind is to either simply share information or to change behavior/performance. It is solely out of concern over results. It is not at all because I'm a voice-over/narrator that I am opposed to the use of text-to-speech technology. txt file and copy / paste the batch line into terminal. Easy to pick up by the file size of the output. It only fails if there's a funny character or the text file is missing. Copying and pasting multiple lines will do it multiple times. Say -v lee -f /Users/sflowers/Desktop/Dropbox/projectname/production/scratch_audio_scenarios/s1_c1.txt -o /Users/sflowers/Desktop/Dropbox/ projectname /production/scratch_audio_scenarios/s1_c1.aiffĬopying and pasting this line into terminal will grab the text file and output an audio file in the voice I've selected. The batch template lines look something like this: Then I setup a batch file for terminal to automatically generate the outputs. txt file for each bit of audio (on the plus side, I have found a way to use this as a transcript feeder). It takes a little bit to set up my transcript input files, I haven't automated that part yet.īasically, when the script is approved, I generate a. Pretty neat trick I use to batch each file using terminal. ![]() ![]() I've switched over entirely from other TTS programs to Mac voices.
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