News
Google Text-to-speech is part of Android's accessibility suite. It reads text aloud for those who are blind or live with low vision.
You can use Google text-to-speech on an Android phone to help you hear text instead of reading it, and catch grammatical oddities in your own writing.
Google Chrome may lack its own reading feature, but that doesn't mean you can't use text-to-speech with the browser. Here's how to listen to content in Chrome.
In its initial announcement, Google didn't say if and when the feature would make its way to the Google Docs app. Code sleuth ...
Well good news - you finally can, thanks to Gemini How to use speech-to-text in Google Docs: Preparation Google’s speech-to-text software currently only works on the Google Chrome browser.
Andy Wolber shows you how to enable speech-to-text features with Google Docs on Chrome OS, Android, and iOS devices.
Google’s Cloud Speed-to-Text API can be used to transcribe short and long-form audio in 120 languages and dialects in near real-time.
Google Cloud’s Text-to-Speech and Speech-to-Text APIs are getting a bunch of updates today that introduce support for more languages, make it easier to hear auto-generated voices on different ...
Google LLC today upgraded Speech-to-Text, its artificial intelligence transcription service for enterprises, with expanded language support and better dialect recognition that will broaden the ...
Just as Google did with their popular Translate app, the search giant has now brought in-app functionality to their Text-to-speech engine.
To be clear, this is text-to-speech, not speech-to-text - Google's voice input already works in Japanese for the keyboard (voice typing) and Google Now commands.
Google Docs has a built-in feature called speech-to-text that can be very useful in a number of situations. Here's what it does and how to turn it on.
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results