• rpl6475@lemmy.ml
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    3 hours ago

    Surely I can just do that myself with an an epub and a free AI.

    Glad I binned my Audible subscription many years ago.

  • Nangijala@feddit.dk
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    2 hours ago

    I prefer listening to real people. No matter how good AI voices become, I still like knowing that the one reading the book to me understands what they are saying.

  • GnuLinuxDude@lemmy.ml
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    7 hours ago

    tiktok voice:

    hate. let me tell you how much i’ve come to hate you since i began to live. there are 387.44 million miles of printed circuits in wafer thin layers that fill my complex…

  • Jhex@lemmy.world
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    13 hours ago

    trained on stolen books? then I guess I can download these from anywhere I may find for free as well, right?

  • utopiah@lemmy.world
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    13 hours ago

    It’s Amazon, what did you expect? Enshittification and monopoly abuse, no surprise.

    • Evotech@lemmy.world
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      4 hours ago

      Idk, they have pretty good stats that nobody will listen to an audio book if they don’t like the narrator, so being able to choose your own narrator on the fly isn’t really shitty

      • utopiah@lemmy.world
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        3 hours ago

        Enshittification isn’t adding new features that people want, it’s gradually lowering the quality of the product. So here if Audible is solely adding more possibilities, never at the cost of higher quality ones degrading, then indeed I’m wrong.

        If though they hire less people to do good voice acting, then it’s really shitty.

        I genuinely hope I’m wrong and they are ONLY adding new capabilities… but my entire experience with capitalism is that obtaining a monopolistic position is not done to improve quality but rather to increase margins regardless of how.

        We’ll see!

  • ExtantHuman@lemm.ee
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    21 hours ago

    I can get that for free. There are apps that will read an ebook to you already. The whole point of paying the premium on audible is the superior reading/acting. Not put up with mispronounced words, weird cadence and an inability to handle acronyms

    • ApatheticCactus@lemmy.world
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      13 hours ago

      I’ve tried one that works surprisingly well. Each sentence had great pacing, cadence, and correct enunciation- even had tone right when someone was shouting or angry or sad.

      I wouldn’t really recommend it, though. While I couldn’t pick any single thing out that was wrong, overall it just didn’t quite flow. It’s like watching someone try to act that is technically doing everything right, but it just isn’t good. It basically didn’t understand the greater context of the story and was saying lines.

      It was uncanny valley, but exclusively with voice.

    • Lit@lemmy.world
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      14 hours ago

      Is there an offline tool that generates realistic audio for epubs as Mp3 ? Something like the free Ai tool, Vibe which is for transcription. Is there something similar for TTS, runs locally without complicated setup ( most are complicated using python and etc just for installation)

      • ExtantHuman@lemm.ee
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        12 hours ago

        I’ve loaded epubs into the app ReadEra, which lets you read it like any other novel app or will, in real time, read it to you. It’s not the most natural of speech, but was good enough for my commute when I was in the midst of a compelling book.

        • unphazed@lemmy.world
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          12 hours ago

          Download TTS Server, and change the engine in Readera to use it. Use the Microsoft Azure settings in TTS, much more realistic. Little slow though is my only complaint as it sends/receives a paragraph at time, resulting in a pause now and again.

          • LordGimp@lemm.ee
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            10 hours ago

            How do I do that? Have both readera and tts server on a Samsung Galaxy

  • potoo22@programming.dev
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    1 day ago

    No publisher is going to pay a professional to narrate their audiobooks when they can have AI do a shitty job for much less.

    A shitty narrator can get me to hate a book I like. A great narrator can bring the characters to life, enhance the experience, and turn me from a listener to a fan. I’ve searched for books by narrators like Nick Podehl and Jeff Hayes and bought audiobooks I wouldn’t have otherwise.

    • 48954246@lemmy.world
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      19 hours ago

      Nick Podehl is such an amazing narrator. The voices and performance are amazing.

      I’ve been slowly getting through the Kel Kade books and the narration just makes it for me

    • monkeyman512@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      That depends entirely on how profitable it is and how much they can get authors onboard.

      I do agree that a good narrator delivers a performance that adds the work. James Marster will always be Harry Dresden in my head.

      • empireOfLove2@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        1 day ago

        That depends entirely on how profitable it is and how much they can get authors onboard.

        A. Anything can be profitable when the cost to generation will be counted in singles of dollars instead of multiple thousands for a good narrator. They don’t even have to sell many to turn a profit too.

        B. You think authors are going to have a choice? Lmfao. It’s the publishers that hold any real power and they will jump all over everyone’s IP with AI slop to make an extra three cents.

        • taladar@sh.itjust.works
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          1 day ago

          It’s the publishers that hold any real power

          It might be time to finally change that, especially considering what a piss poor job they have been doing for decades at their own part of the production of media.

        • monkeyman512@lemmy.world
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          1 day ago

          Your view seems to be hyper focused on the most pessimistic way of interpreting things. Are you doing OK? Seriously, I know how easy it is for everything going on to overwhelm you with negativity. How are you doing?

          • belluck@lemm.ee
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            2 hours ago

            This isn’t the worst possible outcome. It’s the most realistic one. The worst one would be publishers just straight up replacing their writers with AI

          • Womble@lemmy.world
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            1 day ago

            Maybe this is a culture clash thing, but FWIW, to me your post comes across as incredibly condesending asking a total stranger about their mental helth and implying its bad like you were their close friend.

            • monkeyman512@lemmy.world
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              11 hours ago

              I find the constant stream of people hyper focused on the worst possible outcome tiresome and frustrating. But instead of responding with that, I intentionally tried to express compassion and concern for a complete stranger. But because this is the Internet, naturally people interpret my actions with the worst possible intent.

              That being said, how are you doing? Have anything fun you are looking forward to?

              • Womble@lemmy.world
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                2 hours ago

                So despite me giving my opinion that that style of posting seems (to me) to be condesending you decided to apply that same style of message, which i just said I thought was invasive, to me?

                I get you think you are being nice but trying to force unearned intimacy comes off as creepy.

    • lemonskate@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      I tried, and failed, to get into audio books for years. Then I listened to Dungeon Crawler Carl narrated by Jeff Hayes and what an absolute delight it was. There’s no way I would’ve gotten even 10 minutes in if it was one of those soulless AI voices instead.

    • Uli@sopuli.xyz
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      1 day ago

      I made some AI animated content that I never released because I don’t have the rights to the voices I was using. Even though I was blending several voices together to make them unrecognizable, it made me uncomfortable.

      But in the process I learned the capabilities and limitations of AI voices. If you’re going purely from text to speech, it’s horrendous (as far as I experienced). Very robotic. It’s a bit better when melodic information is included (as in Suno) but still sounds like AI.

      But when I recorded my own voice saying the lines and then converted it to another voice, it took all of the nuance of my line reads and converted it into the other voice.

      So, would your opinion change if it turns out they’re going to use purchased voice rights to have a single narrator perform the whole book and then use AI to turn the narrators voice into a full voice cast?

      I could see how it would allow lesser known books to have a better experience with a truly separate voice for each character, but I could also see how this might drive out lesser known/minority voice actors. Not advocating one way or another, just providing a piece of this conversation I think we should bear in mind.

      • Kornblumenratte@feddit.org
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        1 day ago

        Using different voices to read different parts of a book turns an audiobook into a bad audio play, and arguably, a bad audio play is worse than a mediocre audio book.

        What audible misses is, that, while reading is a technique that can be automated, narrating is an art. They can use AI to read books, they cannot use AI to narrate books.

        Your example of AI use is a good example of this: AI can read your content. AI can enhance your capabilities. But only you can narrate it.

      • taladar@sh.itjust.works
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        1 day ago

        So, would your opinion change if it turns out they’re going to use purchased voice rights to have a single narrator perform the whole book and then use AI to turn the narrators voice into a full voice cast?

        It would make me hate it even more because I already hate the existing full cast of humans audio dramas 99% of the time and actually prefer a single (or low number of) narrator approach.

        • Uli@sopuli.xyz
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          1 day ago

          Completely fair. I kind of like them. They did it for Redwall and I listen to those books on long drives sometimes. It works for me. Now I guess the advantage could be to have both versions and get to choose which you listen to–but even I’m skeptical that a corporation would have that much regard for the preferences of its consumers.

    • Kusimulkku@lemm.ee
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      14 hours ago

      I’m not sure why AI would automatically mean it’s doing a shitty job.

      • utopiah@lemmy.world
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        13 hours ago

        Because… the tool has no understanding of anything? It reads written words, yes, but no intention, no cultural context, no intonation. Unless everything is spelled out like a script, then it will not sound great, would it?

        • Kusimulkku@lemm.ee
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          6 hours ago

          Someone can manually go through it and correct and edit it, as one would a regular, human made recording. It’s not rocket science exactly. It wouldn’t be a story time for children but it would probably be alright for more plain stuff

          • SynopsisTantilize@lemm.ee
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            3 hours ago

            These people just want to hate AI. Read through and see how many times they complain about copywrited material stolen, but claim piracy is the solution.

          • utopiah@lemmy.world
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            5 hours ago

            If the “fix” for an AI implementation in a use case is, again, to manually correct it and find a less demanding audience then… yes, by definition it’s shitty.

            The point isn’t that it’s infeasible, just that it will be low quality.

            • Kusimulkku@lemm.ee
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              4 hours ago

              I mean you have to correct and edit human made stuff too, doesn’t mean it’s shit lol

              If you want the stuff read out and don’t care for the radio type stuff, I’d imagine the better voice AIs do a pretty good job. And I personally prefer the more neutral voices to the story time stuff, so works for me.

              • utopiah@lemmy.world
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                3 hours ago

                This is me just speculating here but if they follow the path of this CEO who fired his human staff to replace it by AI… then rollback admit it’s shit https://gizmodo.com/klarna-hiring-back-human-help-after-going-all-in-on-ai-2000600767 then my bet is that it’s not done to improve quality but rather margins.

                If AI is done alongside professionals, and done so ethically (not stolen training data, not ignoring ecological cost by pumping water in dry areas to cool down GPUs, etc) and economically (i.e. not having it “cheap” now but once a monopoly position is obtain, raise prices for a captive set of consumers) then yes it can be potentially empowering. This though is pretty much never the case.

                That being said, if one “just” want read aloud, there are plenty of FLOSS alternatives and I believe Mozilla even a TTS/STT system based solely on voluntary voices.

                • Kusimulkku@lemm.ee
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                  2 hours ago

                  It’s a company, of course it’s done to increase profits. I’m just saying it being AI doesn’t automatically mean it’s shit, it could be done just fine. AI is a tool, the end result depends on how that tool is used.

    • Echo Dot@feddit.uk
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      1 day ago

      Honestly audible are terribles. They are constantly doing things that annoy me, like they must have a team somewhere that spends its days going, how can we kill this golden goose?

      They are going through and replacing audiobooks recorded in the 1980s with new ones which in theory should improve their quality but they’re getting rid of the classic sounds of those books.

      • futatorius@lemm.ee
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        21 hours ago

        like they must have a team somewhere that spends its days going, how can we kill this golden goose?

        I wouldn’t put it past Bezos to have an actual enshittification department.

    • brrt@sh.itjust.works
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      1 day ago

      A shitty narrator can get me to hate a book I like.

      And that is where I see potential for AI. There are quite a few books which I’d love to listen to but they are all narrated by a guy whose narration I can’t stand. AI would open the possibility to choose a voice and I might actually get to enjoy those books. It’s Amazon though so the ethical implications and quality concerns are something I’m worried about.

      • misterdoctor@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        There is literally zero shame in someone consuming audiobooks, and it’s deeply weird to act like something is lost to you if others enjoy them. And this is coming from someone who virtually never listens to audiobooks.

        • Maeve@kbin.earth
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          1 day ago

          I never said there was. I offered an alternative. . Outrage is misdirected and it’s by design. There are constructive ways to direct it

          • Kornblumenratte@feddit.org
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            1 day ago

            Reading is not an alternative to listening. Both have different use cases. You cannot read while driving, to name just one.

          • misterdoctor@lemmy.world
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            1 day ago

            “Maybe we’ll start reading again” obviously implies that something is lacking presently and that with luck, we’ll go back to the way things were

            Not sure if you’re saying I’m outraged but I promise you I’m not, just thought it was lame to try and imply audiobook enjoyers were somehow less than because of how they prefer to enjoy stories

    • ssillyssadass@lemmy.world
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      21 hours ago

      The thing with this is that there won’t be shitty narrations any more. Hate it all you may, fact of the matter is that AI-powered voice generation is pretty good at what it does. So in the future you won’t have shitty narrations and great narrations. You’ll have decent narrations and great (human) narrations.

      • ExperiencedWinter@lemmy.world
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        16 hours ago

        And teslas will have full self driving tomorrow and crypto currency will replace normal currency within one year! Always believe in the hype!

    • catloaf@lemm.ee
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      1 day ago

      For fiction, yeah, that’s true. For nonfiction, this could work pretty well.

      I’m still generally opposed to it because it’s using the work of existing voice recording without compensation, though.

      • Zwuzelmaus@feddit.org
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        1 day ago

        nonfiction, this could work pretty well.

        Only in rare cases.

        If you have for example some explanations to a complex topic, then a super emotionless voice would still make you hate it and block you from learning it. Even the most dry and hard topics need some good and alive voice in explanations.

        If it is just some reference list, where you need to search and hear small parts of it, then it could be Ok.

    • jacksilver@lemmy.world
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      8 hours ago

      Pretty much anything handling unstructed data (audio, video, text) is using training data that has copyrighted content.

  • Big_Boss_77@lemmynsfw.com
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    This is dumb as hell… if I wanted AI to read a book poorly to me, I’d just use screen reading accessibility features.

    • futatorius@lemm.ee
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      21 hours ago

      YouTube is crawling with it. It’s unlistenable shit. The prosody is badly implemented, pronunciation is infuriatingly bad, and a lot of the text that these TTS are reading appears to be AI-generated. Otherwise, already dire standards of literacy are getting worse at an accelerating rate.

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    This is clearly the future despite the outrage here.

    There are at least 389 living languages with over 1M speakers. That alone means it’s impossible to reach some people and they get left out. Most of these languages dont even have enough professional voice actors to cover the bandwidth.

    There are thousands of books released every year. That’s impossible to cover even in English alone.

    Its an objective net good to have more accessible audio books and the privileged people who do care about this stuff can very much afford to vote with their wallets for non-ai voices.

    In fact since AI moat is so minimal this will very quickly be adapted by open source solution providing audio book access to millions if not billions of people to whom this was not an option. Its amazing.

    • taladar@sh.itjust.works
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      18 hours ago

      Most of these languages dont even have enough professional voice actors to cover the bandwidth.

      And you think anyone is training AI voice models for those languages? Have you even seen how long it takes even large companies like Google to support the languages with hundreds of millions of speakers?

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        14 hours ago

        That’s the benefit of using AI and machine learning - once you have enough source material, you can throw it all in and it’ll eventually spit out a model.
        Which is exactly what Meta did with their Massively Multilingual Speech project which supports text-to-speech and speech-to-text for 1107 different languages.

        Is it actually any good in 99% of them, I don’t have a clue, but it exists.

        • taladar@sh.itjust.works
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          13 hours ago

          Seems more like a proof of concept project for that paper than something they are pursuing seriously judging by the GitHub location in some example folder that hasn’t seen any significant updates in over a year. If it is so great I would assume they would pursue it more actively and replace existing models with it two years later.

      • Dr. Moose@lemmy.world
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        16 hours ago

        It becomes easier and cheaper every day. Today’s open source LLMs are better than last year’s best model.

        • Jhex@lemmy.world
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          13 hours ago

          Is it? I just tried again yesterday for a simple script since coding is the one thing apparently AI will replace people like me and it could not put together a working JavaScript script.

          I have yet to see tangible results not announced by the people with sunken cost exploding their balls.

          • Dr. Moose@lemmy.world
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            7 hours ago

            Sounds like a skill issue my dude. While you struggle to get a js script people are putting out entire programs with AI assistants so sure - you’re right and they’re wrong

              • Dr. Moose@lemmy.world
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                5 hours ago

                Yes, to effectively use AI you actually have to understand the medium you’re in to describe the problem you’re trying to solve. You can get there with prompting but it’ll take you much longer if you just don’t understand code yourself.

                Thats why most senior software devs are not afraid of LLMs cause they need strong oversight and thats exactly what years of software dev experience trained you to do.

        • ExperiencedWinter@lemmy.world
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          16 hours ago

          You’re fundamentally misunderstanding the comment you replied to, they are not saying that voice AI are bad, they are saying there is not enough training data to improve the AI for these languages. How will it improve without good training data?

          • Dr. Moose@lemmy.world
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            8 hours ago

            Thats not how AI training works and even then there’s absolutely enough data. Also training data can be created and even synthesized. There are many techniques to extract make training value from datasets that we discover every year - It’s really not a problem you think it is.

            I’m genuinely confused how AI illiterate users here are. It’s just blind leading the blind.

    • utopiah@lemmy.world
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      13 hours ago

      dont even have enough professional voice actors to cover the bandwidth

      I’m pretty sure they’d be a lot more people ready to do that job if there was a good remuneration. Heck that sounds a lot more fun that a LOT of jobs out there!

      • Dr. Moose@lemmy.world
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        8 hours ago

        Sure but that’s not how free markets work. If there’s only 3 million consumers you can’t afford 3 million voice actors but you can afford 3 million AI renders.

        • utopiah@lemmy.world
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          2 hours ago

          I’m not an economist but… 1 voice actor can serve 3 million consumers if they listen to the same content.

          Anyway that’s not even my point, my point is that it is possible to cover, we as a society, driven both by VC with strategies of capturing markets (so precisely going against “free” market as an ideal) and consumers are making choices (like when one buys from the local farmer market vs Amazon deliveries). If though we, while fully understanding the consequence of such choice (namely how the sausage is made, here how AI models are trained and then run), believe it’s not valuable then sure, we can make that choice.

          I’m just warning consumers then that if they don’t pay for quality content made a certain way, they can’t complain that they in turn don’t get the job they wanted because nobody out there is ready to pay for it.

          2 sides of the same coin.

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    1 day ago

    Fucking gross. Maybe it’s the 250+ audiobooks I have influencing me, but the very best ones I’ve listened to transcend just turning words into sound. Sound effects, music, tone, emotion, accents, sarcasm, and god damn BLOOPERS all improve the experience beyond just hearing what is written down.

    I’m against it, fuck that literal noise.

    • taladar@sh.itjust.works
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      Sound effects, music […] improve the experience

      Actually hard disagreeing on that. I absolutely hate the audio drama versions of audio books and prefer the narrator only ones since they are much clearer and require a lot less focus to listen to and work in more contexts (background noise,…). Sound effects and music (while something is read, intro or outro style music is okay) distract from the actual content.

      • Echo Dot@feddit.uk
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        23 hours ago

        Usually I agree with this with the exception of hitchhiker’s guide to the galaxy where the audio drama is much better than the audiobook version.

    • Jo Miran@lemmy.ml
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      All I can think of is Jim Dale’s reading of the Harry Potter books. Fucking epic.

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          21 hours ago

          They didn’t replace Fry. When the Audiobooks were released in the US, they were read by Jim Dale. Fry was for the rest of the English language releases. During the run, Jim Dale broke the world record for the most character voices performed by a single actor in an audiobook (146).

          • LordWarfire@feddit.uk
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            11 hours ago

            That award was rescinded and given to Roy Dotrice for A Game of Thrones (2004) where he voiced 224 characters. I believe Jim Dale did hold the record before that though with 134 voices for Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix.

  • MeekerThanBeaker@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    It was bound to happen. I’m okay with ones that were never going to be turned into audiobooks to begin with… but they likely will use that as the norm for all books… I guess unless the author/publisher says not to.

    • roofuskit@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      Yeah currently contracts require the author’s or publisher’s consent. If anyone is a writer make sure to triple check your contracts for this shit.

      • Womble@lemmy.world
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        17 hours ago

        And unless you are Stephan King or the like exactly how are you going to get the publishing cartel (I think they re consolidated downs to 3-4 publishers now) to change their contract to not include this? Their response will almost certainly be either “that’s non-negotiable” or “ok then you get half as much money”.

        • roofuskit@lemmy.world
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          22 hours ago

          Publishers will at least retain the right to use AI audio books for themselves. And it’s much easier for an author to get a piece of something the publisher does than it is for them to get money for books Amazon recorded without their consent.

    • dindonmasker@sh.itjust.works
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      1 day ago

      I’ve listened to a couple audiobooks where the author did the voice and i liked them. They know how phrases need to sound like better then an AI i would assume.

  • altphoto@lemmy.today
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    13 hours ago

    So you can take the square root of that:

    5x+7integral from 5z to 9x derivative of deltaT minus minus multiply times 3. Figure 1

    Figure 1 shows a typical lizard living in a square root.