Reader was initially launched in June in the US, UK and Canada, giving users the ability to upload any text — such as articles, PDFs or even e-books — and listen to it in different languages and voices. Most, The reader supports many additional languages.such as Portuguese, Spanish, French, German, Japanese, Arabic, Korean, Italian, Swedish, as well as Tamil.
ElevenLabs, which earlier this year raised $80 million from investors including Andreessen Horowitz, provides an API that businesses can leverage for a variety of uses, such as dubbing or text-to-speech. The company bases its voice capabilities on Rabbit r1, while its text-to-speech capabilities are powered by its AI-powered search engine Perplexity, as well as its Pocket FM and Kuku FM platforms. The Reader app is the company’s first product aimed at the average consumer.
For its part, ElevenLabs said it has added hundreds of new voices from its library, suitable for different languages. Last month, the company acquired the rights to use the voices of actors such as Judi Dench, James Dean, Burt Reynolds and Sir Laurence Olivier.
The company announced that the additional language support is based on the Turbo v2.5 model, which was released last month and is said to reduce the lag time in converting text to speech while improving the quality of the result.
Reader’s closest competitor is Speechify, which offers additional features like scanning documents to digitize them, integration with services like Gmail and Canvas, and the ability for users to have their voices cloned to read text. Apps like Mozilla’s Pocket also give users the ability to listen to content they upload to them.
ElevenLabs has announced that it plans to add other features to the app, such as offline support and the ability to share short audio clips.
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