Stanly Thomas

EchoLive: Read, Listen, Create - One app to read, organize, and listen to the web

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EchoLive combines a feed reader, bookmarks manager, and AI audio studio into one platform. Pulse surfaces trending stories. Feeds brings RSS, newsletters, podcasts, and YouTube into one inbox. Saved organizes articles and bookmarks into collections. Daily Brief delivers a personalized audio summary. When you want to create, Studio gives you a segment editor with 630+ neural voices, per-segment control, SSML, and pro exports (MP3/WAV/AAF). Free to start. 25,000 credits. No credit card

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Stanly Thomas
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I spent 20 years in tech leading engineering teams at Microsoft, Oracle, and Paylocity. Through all of it, one habit stayed constant: reading everything I could find. At some point I realized I'm an auditory learner — listening is how ideas actually stick for me. So I was paying for a lot of tools. Speechify and ElevenLabs for listening. Feedly for feeds. Raindrop for bookmarks. Evernote for saving. Each did its job, but none of them talked to each other. I was juggling apps, paying overlapping subscriptions, and still missing features in my workflow. So I built EchoLive — the tool I wanted for myself. What it does today: Pulse: trending stories from across the web with one-click audio Feeds: RSS, newsletters, podcasts, YouTube — one inbox Saved: articles, bookmarks, snippets, organized into collections Daily Brief: personalized audio summary of your feeds + Pulse Studio: multi-segment editor with 630+ neural voices, SSML, and pro exports AI Search: semantic search across your entire library Browser extension for Chrome, Firefox, and Edge It's free to start — 25,000 credits with full Producer-tier features, no credit card needed. After that, 2,500 free credits/month or pay-as-you-go. I'd love to know: what's the first thing you'd use it for — reading/listening, or creating audio?