Advanced Voice From ChatGPT- Switching Voices- The Pirate Voice Test

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 23 พ.ย. 2024

ความคิดเห็น • 8

  • @ronaldann8729
    @ronaldann8729 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Thank you for sharing! This is good for our kids.

    • @DeepLearningDaily
      @DeepLearningDaily  หลายเดือนก่อน

      Kids love it for bedtime storytelling and it is very good for developing their verbal skills. Alex and I used it today to learn some Norweigan.

  • @Technichian462
    @Technichian462 หลายเดือนก่อน

    So, the AI doesnt know how many voices it has access to. AI is a fail.

    • @DeepLearningDaily
      @DeepLearningDaily  หลายเดือนก่อน

      I don't think it is a fail. I think it is more that there is not a limit to how many voices it can do- other than it is copyright limitations on imitating celebrities. Think of it this way: how many people can you imitate? You won't know until you try. So, once you get access to Advanced Voice, just try it out and see how many you can do. If there are some voices you would like me to try, please list them out. I have done more videos. I just need to edit them out. I plan to keep doing them as this is as important tool. Thank you for the feedback.

    • @ThisEpicLife
      @ThisEpicLife หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I experimented the other night, by asking it to create a list of 100 different examples of diverse voice styles/accents, and it nailed every one of them. It had things like, "Sullen goth teen" and "sleazy salesman" and "cheerful carnival barker", "Noir detective", "overenthusiastic gameshow host", and "Transatlantic 1940's American stage actor," et cetera.
      It nailed them all.
      I think the reason it can't give an exact number is because some of them seem to be variations or combinations of base accents. For example, there's an English voice (including variations like Cockney or proper English), but there's also an "English Butler," which is just kind of a slightly slower, modified proper British voice. It's almost like each accent has a base accent, but it also has modifiers like speed, pitch, grammar, etc. So in other words, it seems to be capable of modifying voices into variations which play off of the base voice.
      As examples, you can ask it to speak with a very mild Jersey accent., or a very thick Jersey accent. You can ask it to sound out-of-breath, or "very out of breath, as if running up a steep hill." You can ask it to sound like a "Jersey girl with a very slight hint of Russian accent, who is completely out of breath after running up a very steep hill," or other nuances.
      I won't go so far as to say there are endless variations, but I don't think it's as simple as just having a list of a couple of hundred accents.

    • @DeepLearningDaily
      @DeepLearningDaily  หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@ThisEpicLife This is an excellent explanation! Thank you! Sleazy salesman. I look forward to giving that one a try.

    • @DeepLearningDaily
      @DeepLearningDaily  หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@ThisEpicLife The best use I heard so far had nothing to do with voices. My son and I were stuck in heavy traffic coming back from an appointment and he had a grad class in an hour. He asked Advanced Voice: "What is the difference between ROS I and ROS II?" He then grilled Advanced Voice for the next hour with follow-up questions. By the time I dropped him off at the university, he was completely prepped for his lab. As I was listening in on this conversation, not only did I learn something about Robotic Operating Systems, but I thought: "This is the way the technology should be used."