
Microsoft’s Azure built a replicate of a presenter’s voice for this demo

Microsoft’s Donavan Brown recently shared a video that utilizes Azure Custom Neural Voice to imitate his real voice. Brown is a partner program manager of Azure Incubations at Microsoft. His recent video illustrates the power of Azure when used to replicate human speech.
The video itself is about how to configure Dapr to communicate over gRPC. It’s a clear video that explains the process well, but everyday tech enthusiasts are probably more interested in the technology that went into creating the presentation than the contents of the video.
Azure Custom Neural Voice is a text-to-speech feature in Azure Cognitive Service. It lets organizations create a synthetic voice, such as the Flo virtual chatbot for the insurance company Progressive. When Custom Neural Voice came out of preview in February 2021, Microsoft explained how it could be used for chatbots, voice assistants, online learning, and in other areas.
Traditional methods of creating text-to-speech voices require around 10,000 lines of voice data. In contrast, Azure Custom Neural Voice can create a realistic voice with much less voice data.
On Twitter, Brown explained that he played some sentences out loud with his wife and that neither of them could determine if the clips were of Brown’s actual voice or from the synthetic voice.
Brown also explains that creating a synthetic voice based on a person requires consent.
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