You might consider creating a text-to-speech version by using e.g. Amazon Polly. Whilst imperfect, it is listenable and might be useful to people. Here is a sample generated with the British English Arthur Male voice.
Small thing: British voices sound more credible, which is good, but at the trade-off of being harder to listen to at high speeds, which is my strong preference.
There are probably not a lot of people who are listening to it at high enough speeds that the trade-off is worth it, but that is the trade-off to consider.
Also, my research for the Nonlinear Library found that on average people prefer listening to male voices, for what it’s worth. I didn’t research it hard or for long and don’t think it matters a ton either way, but just to share what I found.
You might consider creating a text-to-speech version by using e.g. Amazon Polly. Whilst imperfect, it is listenable and might be useful to people. Here is a sample generated with the British English Arthur Male voice.
Yes, Amazon Polly is great!
Small thing: British voices sound more credible, which is good, but at the trade-off of being harder to listen to at high speeds, which is my strong preference.
There are probably not a lot of people who are listening to it at high enough speeds that the trade-off is worth it, but that is the trade-off to consider.
Also, my research for the Nonlinear Library found that on average people prefer listening to male voices, for what it’s worth. I didn’t research it hard or for long and don’t think it matters a ton either way, but just to share what I found.