Oddcast Text To Speech New!
Oddcast provides several ways to access its technology, ranging from free demos to professional enterprise plans:
Unlike the robotic, monotone synthesis of the 90s (think Microsoft Sam or early Dr. Sbaitso), Oddcast utilized what was, at the time, state-of-the-art concatenative synthesis. This meant the computer didn't just "read" phonetics; it stitched together tiny snippets of actual human recordings to create sentences. oddcast text to speech
The platform offers over 185 unique voices across more than 30 languages , including regional accents like Australian, Scottish, and Indian English. Oddcast provides several ways to access its technology,
At its core, Oddcast was a software-as-a-service (SaaS) platform that converted written text into spoken audio. Launched in the early 2000s, its flagship product was the “Oddcast TTS Widget,” a Flash-based embeddable tool that allowed any website owner to add a speaking character—or simply a voice—to their page. Unlike the dry, monolithic system voices of Windows (like Microsoft Sam), Oddcast offered a variety of voices, languages, and even emotional inflections. Voices like “Paul” (American English), “Julie,” and the iconic British “Daniel” became instantly recognizable to anyone who spent time on personalized greeting card sites, amateur animation portals like Newgrounds, or early social networks like MySpace. The platform offers over 185 unique voices across
While the technology is now outdated, the "Tom" voice remains an icon. It is the digital folk hero of the internet—misunderstood, slightly robotic, but always there to narrate the chaos of the online world.