Forget a random digital voice telling you to turn left in 800 feet. A new service "clones" real voices so that your mom,edo eroticism art sister, or even you can be the one giving you directions.
It's called "My Car, My Voice," and it's built into Cerence, the voice software in many cars from Toyota, GM, Audi, Chrysler, BMW, and other automakers. It's only available for the voice assistant built into the car, not Google Assistant or Apple's Siri.
To generate the voice, you need a live person to speak a series of sentences into the Cerence app in your infotainment system, which means you can't make it sound like your favorite celebrity unless you know them IRL. If you can get Timothée Chalamet into your car to record some phrases for you, by all means, please do.
In case you're wondering what it sounds like, here is Cerence CEO Sanjay Dhawan.
Once you create a voice clone, it can read any text out loud. The new feature is live now.
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
Babbel, Coursera, and MasterClass deals: Subscriptions on sale ahead of the new year
I am emotionally attached to Ariana Grande and Pete Davidson doing Evanescence karaoke
People are confusing their dogs with this simple towel trick
Politics come to Yelp after restaurant refuses to serve Sarah Sanders
Meta says some AGI systems are too risky to release
Michelle Wolf roasts Trump for not showing up to her White House dinner set
Instagram is adding simpler, private likes on Stories
India's ‘Bunty Aur Babli’ is the superior ‘Bonnie and Clyde’ musical
Best free AI courses in April 2025
Chris Evans trolls Chris Pratt on his birthday, gets the ultimate response
NYT Connections Sports Edition hints and answers for January 28: Tips to solve Connections #127
Twitter has rolled out pinned DMs on iOS, Android, and the web
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。