article thumbnail

Using Text-to-Speech in an eLearning Course

Tony Karrer

This is third post in a series on Text-to-Speech for eLearning written by Dr. Joel Harband and edited by me (which turns out to be a great way to learn). In this post we will begin to address the practical side of the subject: How can e-learning developers use Text-to-Speech (TTS) voices to narrate their courses?

article thumbnail

Text-to-Speech Basics: What Is TTS and Who Uses It?

CourseArc

Call it the age of conversational computing—and the computer’s end of these conversations comes courtesy of a digital technology called text to speech, or TTS for short. In this article, we’ll describe the standard text to speech meaning and list some of the populations who benefit from TTS.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

Free and Open Source Text to Speech Tools for e-Learning

eFront

News from the e-learning frontier Pages Home About Community Free e-Learning Resources Contribute to the e-Learning Community 1/16/2011 Free and Open Source Text to Speech Tools for e-Learning Open source software can be used as we wish, without long-term commitments and with a community of professionals that extend and support them.

article thumbnail

Master Mobile-Based Training: Engage Employees Anywhere

Kitaboo

How to Master Mobile-Based Corporate Training Ensure Cross-Device Compatibility Utilize Internal Resources Include Multimedia and Text-to-Speech Add Interactive Content Leverage Data Analytics Divide Content Into Manageable Segments Measure and Evaluate Impact IV. Conclusion What Is Mobile-Based Corporate Training?

Mobile 52
article thumbnail

Interview: Writing Accessible Copy

Scissortail's Learning Nest

Grammarly Hemingway Editor WellSaid Labs human-sounding text-to-speech voices Animaker Voice text-to-speech tool Wideo text-to-speech tool. Other Resources.

article thumbnail

The Ultimate Checklist for PDF Accessibility: Tips, Tools, and Standards

Hurix Digital

It means that they may appear as blank, blurry, or illegible code for individuals who use assistive technologies such as screen readers, screen magnifiers, text-to-speech software, or Braille displays. Some of the key elements of PDF accessibility are tags, form fields, image accessibility, and text-to-speech compatibility.

PDF 52
article thumbnail

Accessibility Considerations in Healthcare Application UX Design

Hurix Digital

Patients with visual impairments may find navigating difficult when using healthcare applications without sufficient text-to-speech support or alternative text descriptions for buttons and images. For example, text-to-speech technology makes it easier for users to read screen text and makes app navigation simpler.