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bard is a text to speech tool based on existing open-source models (local install) and APIs to install on your desktop

Project description

pypi

Bard

Bard is a text to speech client that integrates on the desktop

Install

Install libraries or system-specific dependencies:

sudo apt-get install portaudio19-dev xclip #  portaudio19-dev becomes portaudio with Homebrew
sudo apt install libcairo-dev libgirepository1.0-dev gir1.2-appindicator3-0.1  # Ubuntu ONLY (not needed on MacOS)
pip install PyGObject # Ubuntu ONLY (not needed on MacOS)

Install the main app with all its optional dependencies:

pip install bard-cli[all]

GNOME

On GNOME desktop you can subsequently run:

bard-install [...] --openai-api-key $OPENAI_API_KEY

to produce a .desktop file for GNOME's quick-launch (the [...] indicates any argument that bard takes)

Usage

In a terminal:

bard

which defaults to:

bard --backend openaiapi --voice allow --model tts-1

(this assumes the environment variable OPENAI_API_KEY is defined)

An icon should show up almost immediately in the system tray, with options to copy the content of the clipboard (the last thing you copy-pasted) and send that to the AI model for reading aloud.

You can also do a one-off reading by indicating the source content with one of the following:

bard --text "Hello world, how are you today"
bard --clipboard
bard --url "example.com" # also accepts file://
bard --html-file /path/to/downloaded.html # access a page with paywal, download it, feed it to bard
bard --pdf-file /path/to/document.pdf  # careful if you pay for it... (the full thing will be transcribed even if you listen to a small bit of it)
bard --audio-file /path/to/audio.mp3 # no actual request, only useful for testing the audio player

The above command will still launch the system tray icon, and so provide access to the audio player's (basic) controls. If you wish to just read aloud without the icon tray app, you may add the --no-tray parameter.

The clipboard parsing capabilities are elaborate enough so that it can detect an URL, a file path or common HTML markup. If a file path is detected, the extension is checked for .html-ish and .pdf, and the data is extracted accordingly. Here we make good use of the most useful work on readability. In particular, this allows relatively easy reading out of webpages behind paywals, by right-clicking on "View Page Source" or similar options, select all text, copy and just proceed with bards' "Process Copied Text" or --clipboard options. For other articles not protected by a paywall, copying the URL should suffice.

You can resume the previous recording (the audio won't play right away in this case, but you can use the reader):

bard --resume

You can ask also ask the app to removed your (local) traces:

bard --clean-cache-on-exit

Fine-tuning

bard --chunk-size 500  # that's the default

sets the maximum length (in characters) of a request. That means about 30 seconds of speech. The program will split up the text in chunks (according to the punctuation) and download them sequentially. The reading will start with the first chunk, that's why it is convenient to keep it small. You can set that smaller or up to the maximum allowed by the openai API (4096).

Player

The player was devised in conversation with Mistral's Le Chat and Open AI's Chat GPT, and my own experience with pystray on scribe. It works.

I'm open for suggestion for other, platform-independent integrations to the OS.

Roadmap

Include more backends including local ones.

Hint

To read whole web pages check out the excellent unclutter browser extensions (reading mode).

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