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Chrome 11 comes with a new feature that converts your mellifluous voice into surprisingly accurate text in the browser, and we've got a quick guide on how to use it.
Google Chrome mobile app lets you read aloud text on a smartphone. However, Chrome for Windows doesn’t provide a native feature to convert text to speech on a computer.
You can use Google text-to-speech on an Android phone to help you hear text instead of reading it, and catch grammatical oddities in your own writing.
To access the new features, open up the Google Translate app, which you can download in the Apple App Store or Google Play.
Google's increasingly popular Web browser, Chrome, now includes built-in speech-to-text translation with Chrome version 11, now available for download.
The HTML 5 feature for the latest release of Chrome supports translating from English to other languages, although with some languages Google Translate can also pronounce the foreign words for you.
Google Text-to-speech is part of Android's accessibility suite. It reads text aloud for those who are blind or live with low vision.
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