Comment by tyrauber
2 days ago
Hey, do yourself a favor and listen to the fun example:
> [S1] Oh fire! Oh my goodness! What's the procedure? What to we do people? The smoke could be coming through an air duct!
Seriously impressive. Wish I could direct link the audio.
Kudos to the Dia team.
For anyone who wants to listen, it's on this page: https://yummy-fir-7a4.notion.site/dia
Wow. Thanks for posting the direct link to examples. Those sound incredibly good and would be impressive for a frontier lab. For two people over a few months, it's spectacular.
A little overacted, it reminds me of the voice acting in those flash cartoons you'd see in the early days of YouTube. That's not to say it isn't good work, it still sounds remarkably human. Just silly humans :)
Overacted and silly humans indeed: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gO8N3L_aERg
"flash cartoons in the early days of Youtube" Wouldn't those be straight from Newgrounds?
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Reminded me of the Fenslerfilm G.I. Joe sketch where the kids have something on the stove burning
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This is an instant classic. Sesame comparison examples all sound like clueless rich people from The White Lotus.
Sounds great. One of the female examples has convincing uptalk. There must be a way to manipulate the latent space to control uptalk, vocal fry, smoker’s voice, lispiness, etc.
Thank you!! Indeed the script was inspired from a scene in the Office.
This is oddly reminiscent of the office. I wonder if tv shows were part of its training data!
This is so good. Reminds me of The Office. I love how bad the other examples are.
The text is lifted from a scene in The Office: https://youtu.be/gO8N3L_aERg?si=y7PggNrKlVQm0qyX&t=82
Yeah, that example is insane.
Is there some sort of system prompt or hint at how it should be voiced, or does it interpret it from the text?
Because it would be hilarious if it just derived it from the text and it did this sort of voice acting when you didn't want it to, like reading a matter-of-fact warning label.