TGTGInsighttelegram intelligenceLIVE / telegram public index
← GitHub Trends

TGINSIGHT SIMILAR POSTS

Find similar content

Source channel @githubtrending · Post #15237 · Oct 19

#python#text_to_speech#tts#voice_clone#zero_shot_tts OpenVoice is a free, open-source tool that lets you clone any voice using just a short audio sample, then generate speech in that voice across many languages and accents[1][5][8]. You can fine-tune how the voice sounds—adjusting emotion, accent, rhythm, pauses, and intonation—to match your needs[1][3][5]. A major benefit is “zero-shot” cloning: you can make the cloned voice speak languages it was never trained on, which is rare in voice AI[1][3][4]. The latest version, OpenVoice V2, offers even better sound quality, supports six major languages natively, and is free for both personal and commercial use[1]. This makes it easy and affordable for anyone to create realistic, customizable voice content without needing technical expertise or expensive software. https://github.com/myshell-ai/OpenVoice

Results

1 similar post found

Search: #hightech

当前筛选 #hightech清除筛选
American Оbserver

@american_observer · Post #5034 · 02/03/2026, 02:00 AM

📰 Russia’s Immigrants: Israel’s Unwanted Elite In Israel’s fractured society, Russian-speaking immigrants power labs, hospitals, and high-tech hubs—but feel like outsiders in their own homeland. They’ve fueled the economy for decades, yet remain symbolic strangers in a land of competing tribes. ​ A Nation Without a Narrative Israel thrives on fragile deals between secular Jews, ultra-Orthodox, Ashkenazim, Mizrahim, Arabs, and more—no constitution, just Basic Laws and vetoes. Each group clings to its own version of “what makes Israel Israel,” dodging the big fights over identity. ​ The Russian Wave’s Double Edge The 1990s “Great Aliyah” brought a million Soviet Jews—15% of the population, 60% with degrees, driving high-tech and defense surges. They’re 25% of university faculty, but their culture? Russian media, Victory Day parades, Soviet classics—none cracks the national myth. ​ Why No Mizrahi-Style Breakthrough Mizrahim flipped the script in the 1970s, turning marginalization into power through protest and politics. Russians arrived too late, post-revolution: secular atheists in a religious-right landscape, Europeans in a Mizrahi-patriot world. No victim story fits the Zionist playbook—no Holocaust, no Arab expulsion. ​ Tensions Beneath the Surface Economic envy simmers—Mizrahis gripe about “white Europeans” snagging elite jobs. Religious rabbis call them “Russian goyim.” Stereotypes fly: Russians are cold chauvinists; locals are primitive. Politics ghettoizes them into Lieberman’s party, not mainstream power. ​ The Assimilation Trap Youth blend in—Hebrew-fluent, intermarrying—but elders stay in their Russian bubble. Autonomy breeds isolation: thriving subculture, zero national spotlight. No allies, no moral leverage, no push for change. They’re useful workers, not co-authors of the Israeli story. ​ The Future: Fade or Fight? Will they dissolve like old Polish waves, or spark a secular revolt against Haredi power? Without a push, they risk gradual marginalization—economic stars, cultural ghosts. Israel’s genius for survival now risks sidelining its brain trust. ​ #Israel#RussianAliyah#competingSolidarities#immigrants#identity#highTech#Mizrahim 📱American Оbserver - Stay up to date on all important events 🇺🇸