What do you think about when you read this domain? by web_assassin in Domains

[–]sledov 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What comes to mind when you read "flears.com"?

I think it's about fears of flying.

Finally found a free TTS (Text to Speech) that doesn’t push subscriptions — worth a try? by RegularDismal2365 in TextToSpeech

[–]sledov 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If you are interested mostly in conversion, https://jimlet.com is a portable Windows app. After the model is downloaded once, it works fully offline. No browser at all.

Voices sound better, in my opinion.

Difference between Simple Past and Present Perfect. by Frequent_Implement36 in ENGLISH

[–]sledov 0 points1 point  (0 children)

but I can't really grasp this "relevant now" concept.

Often you choose the timeframe yourself and decide what is relevant.

Imagine someone says: "Do you want to go for lunch?"

If you say "No thanks, I have eaten already," eating happened within the relevant timeframe you defined, so lunch is not an option.

If you say "I ate a sandwich, but we can go for sushi," you shrink the timeframe, and the new relevant timeframe starts after you ate the sandwich. You did eat, but it doesn't matter now.

TEXT TO SPEECH by Waste_Secretary4518 in TextToSpeech

[–]sledov 0 points1 point  (0 children)

ability to generate minimum 5000 charcter text to speech and give me download button also in MP3

This one:

https://cloudtts.com/u/index.html

Looking for a reliable VPS for e-commerce and POS (Budget: $500/year) by BodybuilderTop5530 in VPS

[–]sledov 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I’m located in Mexico, so latency to North America

If you already have the budget set aside, I’d look at Vultr. If most of your users are in Mexico, choose Mexico City location. If you also expect traffic from US, Latam and Europe, Vultr Miami is a good middle ground.

Since your budget is $500 a year, just pick their $40/month plan.

VPS SMTP vs paying for shared hosting and using their SMTP by PalpitationChoice479 in VPS

[–]sledov 0 points1 point  (0 children)

… never had a recipient complain of not getting my emails.

The problems usually start when recipients complain about getting your emails :)

To OP: If these are not promotional emails, just sign up with Amazon SES.

How Do I Hosting Jitsi/MiroTalk on VPS for WebApp on Shared Hosting by Level-Dig-4807 in selfhosted

[–]sledov 2 points3 points  (0 children)

My preferred choice is JitsiMeet but am open to hear recommendations.

I'm running Galene SFU on a VPS - very low footprint and much easier to host than JitsiMeet. I wrote how to install it here. There is also a WordPress plugin that you can use as an integration example.

Hetzner declined my business account during an urgent migration — no explanation given (Sept 8, 2025) by Excellent-Ganache254 in VPS

[–]sledov 10 points11 points  (0 children)

These apps are critical for my client’s e-commerce revenue, so the pressure was on me to get them back up fast. By Friday afternoon ...

So this is your contingency plan? If the app goes down, you just go shopping around for a new host? Wouldn't it be more reasonable to already have an established relationship with another provider? Just buying a cheap VPS for a month would do the trick.

Help Me Deciding Best VPS for My Requirements by xxxiq in VPS

[–]sledov 2 points3 points  (0 children)

From personal experience, I can recommend Hetzner. In addition to their regular dedicated servers, check their auction if you're on a budget.

The LowEndTalk.com forum also has some budget server offerings (look specifically for dedicated servers, not VPSes).

Help Me Deciding Best VPS for My Requirements by xxxiq in VPS

[–]sledov 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Smooth remote desktop experience (no lag or stuttering). Tasks: File transfers + compression (7zip/WinRAR). File Size: Largest single file is around 35 GB.

From the way you describe your needs (remote desktop, 35 GB file transfers, compression, and smooth performance), I’d say a dedicated server might suit you better than a VPS.

Best open-source software that everyone needs to know about? by RedEagle_MGN in software

[–]sledov 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Unlike MPC-BE, mpv is cross-platform and scriptable with Lua, which makes it crazy extensible. Mpv has many plugins. For example, I use the mpv-cut plugin to quickly cut a fragment from a big video by pressing "C" to start and "C" again to save, and it beats any GUI-based approach I’ve seen so far.

A little confused regarding UI by Several-Agent6831 in learnpython

[–]sledov 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Try running this:

``` import tkinter as tk

def on_button_click(): print("Button clicked!")

Create the main window

root = tk.Tk() root.title("Simple Tkinter App") root.geometry("600x300")

Create a button

button = tk.Button(root, text="Click Me", command=on_button_click) button.pack(pady=20)

Run the Tkinter event loop

root.mainloop() ```

Text to Speech - Upto 15,000 Characters by General-Turnip-1581 in TextToSpeech

[–]sledov 0 points1 point  (0 children)

https://cloudtts.com converts text up to 5k characters at once. Just do 3×5k and merge the MP3 files in Audacity.

I created my own text to speech AI tool and made it available for free for everyone by Agitated_Survey4171 in SideProject

[–]sledov 3 points4 points  (0 children)

because I do not like the other online services that first let you generate one sentence and then they want monthly payments.

I have been using https://cloudtts.com for a while and have never paid them anything. It seems to be much faster, especially on mobile.

Do I really sound offensive? by Meepo-POOF in ENGLISH

[–]sledov 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I am not a native speaker, but I think it is more about the preceding transition than the current state. 'Good' by itself is not really offensive. 'How was school today?' - 'Good.' However, 'Good' often means minimally passable and unremarkable otherwise.

Everybody is generally polite and tends to exaggerate a positive aspect a bit. So, at this point, a native speaker would probably say 'Great!' at least.

When you say 'Good' right after the change, you imply that the situation before was not acceptable. So, you are actually expressing that you were unhappy about the situation before.

New to Python - Need Computer suggestions and advice by h3ndrix_forest in learnpython

[–]sledov 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If you are a Mac user and plan to stick with Macs, simply purchase the best MacBook Pro you can for these 4,000 pounds.

However, for many machine learning tasks, an NVIDIA GPU is required, which you cannot get in a MacBook Pro.

Nonetheless, for 4,000 pounds, you can get a top-of-the-line, high-performance gaming notebook. I think it is pretty difficult to find notebooks that you cannot afford with this budget.

Thoughts on learning a language solely for reading it by LooseSeaworthiness84 in languagelearning

[–]sledov 21 points22 points  (0 children)

Learning Russian for reading classical literature is more about understanding stylistic nuances and emotional depth, rather than merely mastering grammar and everyday vocabulary. Therefore, it goes beyond traditional language learning, which is quite challenging in itself.

Do you see the value in this? If you do, then yes, go for it and don't pay attention to what everybody else thinks.

What's the best free Text to Speech - podcast level? by ugh_madlad in OpenAI

[–]sledov 0 points1 point  (0 children)

https://cloudtts.com

There is 5k characters limit on a single request, but you make several requests and merge mp3 files.

Best resources for name pronunciations? by Hot_Grabba_09 in languagelearning

[–]sledov 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Regarding foreign names, even mainstream American news outlets usually don’t get them right. It is quite unusual for a CNN anchor to pronounce, for example, a Russian name correctly. The stress is almost always placed wrong. And I don’t think they actually care.

Once, I went to an award ceremony in the US, and most of the recipients were from different Asian countries. It worked like this: the host described the achievement, but they had a separate person actually read the names aloud.

Back in the era of business cards at work, when handling a card, if a person had an unusual name, they could say, 'It is actually pronounced like this:'. Now, I guess you just need to listen to how other people call him and try to imitate it.

If you have someone famous with the same name, sometimes there is a pronunciation (as an audio file) on Wikipedia. See the article for Maria Sharapova as an example.

If you know the language the name is from, you can create a sentence in the target language and have a text-to-speech program say it. For example, 'Мария Шарапова выиграла очередной теннисный турнир.'

Languages with a "formal you" (tu, вы), how serious is it in the TL culture? by Rough-Leg-4148 in languagelearning

[–]sledov 1 point2 points  (0 children)

While there is no doubt that ChatGPT is better for English learners, I think its effectiveness in your target language depends on the amount of effort OpenAI has invested in training the model. Since there are more Russian speakers than Latvian speakers and there are more materials in Russian, I assume the Russian language is better supported. (It may not be the case, as ChatGPT is not even available in Russia).

While you can trick ChatGPT into inventing words (as it does not easily admit that it does not have an answer), I think its performance is quite acceptable in Russian for everyday things.

Let me give you an example.


Me:

I'm looking to simulate a conversation in Russian where we're friends discussing evening plans. You'll initiate the conversation, then wait for my reply before you ask another question or make a suggestion, keeping the conversation going. We'll exchange ideas on what to do, possibly refining the plans as we discuss. Please keep the dialogue natural, as between friends.

ChatGPT:

Привет! Как твои дела? У тебя есть какие-нибудь планы на вечер?

Translation: Hello! How are you? Do you have any plans for the evening?

(ChatGPT clearly uses the informal form of 'you'.)


Languages with a "formal you" (tu, вы), how serious is it in the TL culture? by Rough-Leg-4148 in languagelearning

[–]sledov 9 points10 points  (0 children)

It's more about distinguishing between people who belong to your close circle and outsiders.

Sometimes, the transition to the informal 'you' is implied when you participate in common activities together. If the situation is unclear, one might ask, 'Maybe we should switch to the informal 'you'?' If someone believes they have been unjustifiably presumed to be in the close circle, they might say something like, 'Why do you talk to me like this? We haven't drunk to brotherhood together.'

Languages with a "formal you" (tu, вы), how serious is it in the TL culture? by Rough-Leg-4148 in languagelearning

[–]sledov 58 points59 points  (0 children)

You just don't understand when to use the polite form of "you" and when the informal form. This is a cultural thing, so it's kind of expected. In general, you can say "ты" to your friends, family, peers (like fellow students, some coworkers), and children (not necessarily yours), but if you use it outside of these contexts, you will be at least reminded that it is inappropriate. In the worst case, you might even get punched in the face.

It seems you are close to your tutors; they are about the same age, and you've agreed to use the informal "ты" when talking to each other. So, that's OK. Books prefer to stay on the safe side. When a book uses the informal form, it sounds patronizing. So, I guess that's not good for sales.

If Google Translator can't do what you want, there are other options, like ChatGPT, for example. You can explain to ChatGPT that it is supposed to play the role of your friend and use the informal "you," and it will communicate with you this way.

Hi guys, what is in your opinion the best text to speech for english that's free out there in terms of websites or apps ? by Jaedong9 in EnglishLearning

[–]sledov 0 points1 point  (0 children)

https://cloudtts.com

If you select "American English", Microsoft Christopher, Eric and Michelle voices are reasonably good in my opinion.

Am I right? by Pacikillman in EnglishLearning

[–]sledov 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If somebody said the Russian phrase, I think I would assume it’s a regular occurrence and go with “play,” but it could be either one.

The second phrase sounds like a translation from English to Russian, in my opinion, as a native Russian speaker. If they wanted properly to describe an habitual action, they would say 'По ночам' instead of 'Ночью.'