

The upside is it is quick, easy, and free. The downside is, you can't select your voice.

This works for me as long as I am outside of my company's firewall (which blocks the audio cookie). (Note: you don't need to actually translate the text to another language.)Ģ) Click the listen button in the window where the "to be translated" text sits.ģ) Look in your browser window cookies folder for the mp3 file google just created to play back your text.Ĥ) Move and rename the file so you can find it later. Now that I've updated my audio drivers, it works like a charm.Īs an alternative, you can actually use google translate to create MP3 files from text for free.ġ) Type or paste the text into the translation window. I also discovered that my sound card driver was outdated so it would not let me select it when using apps like Replay. I'm also on windows 7 and found that the option was listed as Rec. For example, if you need to translate this PDF file into Spanish, go to and enter the files URL into the textbox, then choose 'Spanish' as the target language. Google Translate also offers both site owners and their readers a way to translate documents hosted on a website. Unfortunately I don't have the "stereo mix" option on my Windows 7 machine after I selected the "show disabled devices' option. For all other websites, we recommend using the Google Cloud Translation API.
