Hey, that's awesome that you shared so much. I'll dig into it and see what I can use it for. Those voices are really impressive. I listen to audiobooks enough that I could never afford to use this method regularly, but it's very cool.
MathProf
Hmm, well I'll keep hacking away at it
I primarley use it in combination with google wavenet/ Elevenlabs to generate audio books from light novels (for personal use)
Do you mind sharing your workflow for this? It looks like their pricing is quite high for a book's worth of text.
I also saw someone incorporate elevenlabs into Tasker.
Oh, hey, that's cool! I knew the "network" icon was a direct link, but didn't know searching for it on my instance would sync it. Super cool.
Can you walk me through how to do it? As it is, I can only see a thread on a community I'm not subscribed to by going to the instance it's hosted on. But I'm not logged in there.
Oh it's not that big a deal. I guess it sounds like I'm frustrated, but text can be like that. I'm just trying to figure some things out. And it turns out that all but one of the pending subs are on lemmy.ml, so it really is likely a server-side issue.
Yep what? How do you do it?
Thanks! I'm subbed now. Of course, the comments that were added before I subbed aren't accessible from here, but at least I can join any that come along later.
I have about a half dozen pending subscriptions, and have tried a few times to unsub then resub over the past 24 hours to them to no avail. I'll keep trying. But they're not all on the same server.
I see, thanks. Yeah, that stinks. I'll say one of my favorite ways to use reddit has been to search for threads related to an interest of mine and join the discussion, whether or not I'm subscribed to the subreddit. It seems like that's not possible on Lemmy.
Can you explain how you do it? When I go to the thread on another instance, it says I'm not logged in and can't comment.
In Jerboa that first link at beehaw gives me "404: coundnt_find_community", but then I clicked the second link and it looks like it worked.