Optus Mobile Review ALDI Mobile Review Amaysim Mobile Review Belong Mobile Review Circles.Life Review Vodafone Mobile Review Woolworths Mobile Review Felix Mobile Review Best iPhone Plans Best Family Mobile Plans Best Budget Smartphones Best Prepaid Plans Best SIM-Only Plans Best Plans For Kids And Teens Best Cheap Mobile Plans Telstra vs Optus Mobile Optus NBN Review Belong NBN Review Vodafone NBN Review Superloop NBN Review Aussie BB NBN Review iiNet NBN Review MyRepublic NBN Review TPG NBN Review Best NBN Satellite Plans Best NBN Alternatives Best NBN Providers Best Home Wireless Plans What is a Good NBN Speed? Test NBN Speed How to speed up your internet Optus vs Telstra Broadband ExpressVPN Review CyberGhost VPN Review NordVPN Review PureVPN Review Norton Secure VPN Review IPVanish VPN Review Windscribe VPN Review Hotspot Shield VPN Review Best cheap VPN services Best VPN for streaming Best VPNs for gaming What is a VPN? VPNs for ad-blocking For those who don’t have the time or tendency to sit down with a good book anymore, audiobooks can be a great alternative. Even hauntingly large texts like War & Peace become a little more manageable when you’re able to work through them in bite-sized chunks while you’re doing chores, running errands or working out at the gym.  Audiobooks.com works similarly, with a monthly subscription cost of $16.45 getting you a single audiobook plus a second audiobook from the service’s VIP Access collection each month.  There’s also Scribd, which offers unlimited access to a catalogue of ebooks and audiobooks, for a monthly price of $13.99. Fortunately, if you don’t fancy adding another subscription service to your monthly batch of bills, there is an alternative. It’s developed by Google, free to download on both iOS and Android and built into the tech giant’s existing Play Books app. Rather than feature the kind of pomp, circumstance and bespoke production quality you’d find in a traditional ebook, these audiobooks relied entirely on the company’s text-to-speech tech. The final product is not quite as seamless as having Siri read you a bedtime story, but it’s not far off either. In the years since then, Google has further developed this tech into a feature called Read Aloud. Once enabled, this can instantly turn any ebook in your Google Play library into an audiobook. What’s more, Read Aloud is supported not just for books bought via Google’s own online storefront but also those bought elsewhere and imported into the app. Again, the end user experience here is nowhere near as cinematic or slick what you’ll get from a modern and mainstream audiobook provider like Audiobooks.com or Audible. Nevertheless, if you’re looking to work your way through a more academic text or keen to save that little bit of extra cash amid rising inflation, it might be a decent way to go about it. The dulcet tones of Google’s text to speech voice are recognisably robotic, but when the price is free and you can seamlessly jump between having a book read to you and reading it yourself, the practical value that this feature adds to any (and all existing) ebook purchases becomes really hard to overlook.  What’s more, Google’s Read Aloud feature also supports as many languages as the company’s other text-to-speech offerings do. This means you can listen to audio of a book in languages that may not be otherwise available. Given the perils of Google Translate, this is likely to be an imperfect prospect. Nevertheless, the fact that it’s free and allows you to listen to audio versions of texts that might not have an audiobooks in a given language is another strong point in Google’s favor.

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