Convert Text to VoIP in MorphVOX Pro — Plug‑In for Live Speech Output
What it is
A plug‑in that takes typed text, converts it to speech (TTS), and routes the audio into MorphVOX Pro’s output so the synthesized voice is sent to VoIP apps, games, or streaming software in real time.
Key features
- Real‑time TTS: Low‑latency conversion of typed text to spoken audio.
- Voice mapping: Route TTS output through MorphVOX voice effects (pitch, timbre, EQ).
- Output routing: Send processed audio to system virtual audio device (e.g., VB‑Cable, VoiceMeeter) or directly into MorphVOX’s output stream.
- Hotkeys & macros: Trigger preset phrases or start/stop TTS with configurable keys.
- Multiple voices & languages: Support for different TTS engines (system SAPI, Amazon Polly, Google TTS, local neural voices).
- Rate/volume control: Adjustable speech rate, pitch, volume, and pronunciation tweaks.
- Clipboard & input modes: Type live, paste text, or auto‑speak clipboard contents.
- Logging & queuing: Queue long text and show history of recent utterances.
Typical use cases
- Live streaming with on‑screen chat readouts.
- Accessibility for users who prefer typing.
- Roleplay or gaming where preset lines are triggered.
- Conference calls where prepared statements are delivered consistently.
- Bot voices for community events or automated announcements.
Basic setup (prescriptive)
- Install MorphVOX Pro and a virtual audio device (e.g., VB‑Cable or VoiceMeeter).
- Install the Text‑To‑VoIP plug‑in and select preferred TTS engine.
- In plug‑in settings, choose output: direct MorphVOX input or virtual device that MorphVOX listens to.
- Configure MorphVOX to take that virtual device as input (or use the plug‑in’s direct integration).
- Adjust voice effects in MorphVOX; test by typing a short phrase and verifying audio reaches your target VoIP app.
- Assign hotkeys/macros for common phrases and set voice/rate presets.
Tips & limitations
- Use a low‑latency TTS engine for conversational use; cloud neural voices can add network delay.
- If using virtual audio devices, ensure sample rates match across apps to avoid glitches.
- Some VoIP apps may require selecting the virtual device as microphone input.
- Check licensing for third‑party TTS services if used commercially.
If you want, I can draft an install/config screen checklist or three short promotional blurbs for this plug‑in.
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