Launching today
VocalVia
Turn documents and articles into editable multi-voice audio
72 followers
Turn documents and articles into editable multi-voice audio
72 followers
VocalVia turns PDFs, Word files, Markdown, web articles, and pasted text into structured outlines, editable podcast scripts, and natural multi-voice audio. Choose speakers and voices, refine individual segments, then export the finished audio. It is built for saved reading, study notes, research papers, and long-form content you want to listen to away from a screen.







Is it primarily for generating podcasts?
VocalVia
@ragsyme Podcast-style, multi-speaker audio is a core use case, but it isn’t the only one. VocalVia also supports single-voice narration and voiceovers for research papers, saved articles, study notes, tutorials, and other long-form documents.
The common idea is to turn the source material into an editable script first, so users can review the structure, wording, speakers, and voices before generating the final audio.
Finally tried it on a 40-page research paper and the multi-voice narration actually makes the dense sections easier to follow than my usual text-to-speech. Editing individual segments before export is a nice touch too.
VocalVia
@mirag1jy Thank you for putting a full 40-page research paper through it, Mira — that’s exactly the kind of real-world test I was hoping for. I’m especially glad the multi-voice structure made the dense sections easier to follow and that segment editing felt useful.
If you noticed any sections where citations, tables, pronunciation, or pacing still sounded awkward, I’d genuinely appreciate the details. That feedback would be very useful for improving the document-to-script step.
Dropped a 40-page research paper in and got a pretty clean two-host audio rundown in a few minutes. Editing individual segments before export is a nice touch, especially for cleaning up citations.
VocalVia
@havvaq6ab Thanks for testing VocalVia with a full 40-page paper, Havva. Citation cleanup is exactly why I wanted an editable script and segment step instead of making the process a one-click black box.
I’m glad the two-host draft gave you a useful starting point. I’d be especially interested to know which citation formats still required the most manual cleanup, as that would help me improve the script-generation stage.