BTW, it seems that kitten (the Python package) has the following chain of dependencies: kittentts → misaki[en] → spacy-curated-transformers
So if you install it directly via uv, it will pull torch and NVIDIA CUDA packages (several GB), which are not needed to run kitten.
cristoperb 20 hours ago [-]
Thanks, your install script worked for me.
In case it helps anyone else, the first time I tried to run purr I got "OSError: PortAudio library not found". Installing libportaudio (apt install libportaudio2) got it running.
Mic92 15 hours ago [-]
Also did create a cli. I had to fork the project and removed one unused import which allowed me to remove a lot of unused ml libraries: https://github.com/Mic92/puss-say
Mic92 15 hours ago [-]
Unfortunately upstream never looks at any pull requests.
ilyaizen 5 hours ago [-]
You might also like CopySpeak, a lightweight tool I've recently built for quick AI text-to-speech using the clipboard, featuring Kitten TTS and other engines.
Thank you so much, that fixes an enormous pain point I was hitting. It's not just the size, that dependency chain was actually breaking on my machine and failing to install. Are we losing something by dropping the extra dependencies?
dawdler-purge 19 hours ago [-]
I don't think so. It is perhaps a bug to have this unnecessary dependency. I expect the author of kitten to fix this soon.
rohan_joshi 17 hours ago [-]
thanks a lot for helping w this. yes i'll fix this asap.
dawdler-purge 16 hours ago [-]
Please let me know when this has been fixed. I will update purr to make the installation steps simpler.
kevin42 1 days ago [-]
What I love about OpenClaw is that I was able to send it a message on Discord with just this github URL and it started sending me voice messages using it within a few minutes. It also gave me a bunch of different benchmarks and sample audio.
I'm impressed with the quality given the size. I don't love the voices, but it's not bad. Running on an intel 9700 CPU, it's about 1.5x realtime using the 80M model. It wasn't any faster running on a 3080 GPU though.
rohan_joshi 1 days ago [-]
yeah we'll add some more professional-sounding voices and also support for diy custom voices. we tried to add more anime/cartoon-ish voices to showcase the expressivity.
Regarding running on the 3080 gpu, can you share more details on github issues, discord or email? it should be blazing fast on that. i'll add an example to run the model on gpu too.
nine_k 18 hours ago [-]
I wonder if it's possible to guide the intonation in any way.
nsnzjznzbx 24 hours ago [-]
Oh that is a good use case. Don't connect to email and all that insecure stuff. But as a sandbox for "try this out and deploy a demo". Got me thinking!
Aerroon 20 hours ago [-]
I'm jealous. It took me far longer and much more frustration to get it to run.
Had to get the right Python version and make sure it didn't break anything with the previous Python version. A friend suggested using Docker, so I started down that path until I realized I'd probably have to set the whole thing up there myself. Eventually got it to run and I think I didn't break anything else.
I hate Python so much.
stavros 18 hours ago [-]
Nowadays these frustrations shouldn't be a thing any more. If the author used uv, the script would be able to install its own dependencies and just work.
rohan_joshi 17 hours ago [-]
yeah let me add uv and conda support to make it easier.
stavros 6 minutes ago [-]
Thanks! I asked my bot to make me a plugin for it and it one-shotted it, the resulting script was ~20 lines, very nice!
Barbing 13 hours ago [-]
One of the most responsive developers I’ve ever seen, kudos
RobertoG 20 hours ago [-]
why you don't use some kind of environment, Conda or something like that?
deathanatos 19 hours ago [-]
I used uv, which should have generated a stable environment. No dice. There's a bug in spacey.
I suspect success is highly variable on macOS vs. Linux; the spacey bug is only in newer (3.14 only or later) Pythons, which Linux will have.
rohan_joshi 17 hours ago [-]
thanks for pointing these errors out. we're looking into this and will help fix this.
sysworld 19 hours ago [-]
Even the built in venv would've solved most of his issues too. But I agree with him in that Python documentation could be better. Or have a more unified system in place. I feel like every other how to doc I read on setting something Python up uses a different environment containment product.
jacquesm 18 hours ago [-]
Conda was fantastic up to some point last year and since then I've had quite a few unresolvable version issues with it. It is really annoying, especially when you're tying multiple things together and each requires its own set of mutually exclusive specific versions of libraries. The latest like that was gnu radio and some out-of-tree stuff at the same time as a bluetooth library. High drama. I eventually gave up, rewrote the whole thing in a different language and it took less time than I had spent on trying to get the python solution duct-taped together.
I should learn to give up quicker.
Aerroon 19 hours ago [-]
Because I need a new version of python very rarely (years go by). I don't remember all the arcane incantations to set everything up.
I did eventually do that though, and I'm pretty sure I had to mess about with installing and uninstalling torch.
I dread using anything made in python because of this. It's always annoying and never just works (if the version of python is incompatible, otherwise it's fine) .
RobertoG 11 hours ago [-]
I don't know, I'm pretty happy with Conda. I just create a new environment and install on it. It normally works.
Even if you have to install using pip it just affect the active environment.
Maybe I'm only trying simple things.
rohan_joshi 17 hours ago [-]
damnn, really sorry for the inconv, looks like some folks are having bad env issues. we're working on fixing this.
Aerroon 4 hours ago [-]
It's absolutely not your fault. It's a skill issue and compatibility issue on my end and/or python. You guys are doing amazing.
To the folks and Kitten team: I'm working on TTS as a problem statement (for an application), and what is the best model at the latency/cost inference. I'm currently settling for gemini TTS, which allows for a lot of expressiveness, but a word at 150ms starts to hurt when the content is a few sentences.
my current best approach is wrapping around gemini-flash native, and the model speaking the text i send it, which allows me end to end latency under a second.
are there other models at this or better pricing i can be looking at.
__fst__ 22 hours ago [-]
Was playing around a bit and for its size it's very impressive. Just has issues pronounciating numbers. I tried to let it generate "Startup finished in 135 ms."
I didn't expect it to pronounciate 'ms' correctly, but the number sounded just like noise. Eventually I got an acceptable result for the string "Startup finished in one hundred and thirty five seconds.
rohan_joshi 22 hours ago [-]
yeah we're fixing this at the model level too. but in the meantime, there is a way to add text preprocessing for you, and if you have a special use-cased, claude code should be able to one-shot custom preprocessing. its the way that most existing tts models (including sota cloud ones) deal w numbers and units, they just convert it into string.
rohan_joshi 22 hours ago [-]
thanks a lot for trying it and giving feedback. custom preprocessing will fix this for 95% of use-cases. and as i mentioned, this will be fixed at the model level in the next release.
magicalhippo 21 hours ago [-]
I tried it with some "hard mode" text:
The above SECDED check-bit encoding can be implemented in a similar way, but since it uses only three-bit patterns, mapping syndromes to correction masks can be done with three-input AND gates.
It sounded quite good indeed for the normal English stuff, but I guess predictably was quite bad at the domain-specific words. It misspoke "SECDED", had wrong emphasis on "syndromes", and pronounced "AND gates" like "and gates".
Could you give some example of what kind of preprocessing would help in this case? I tried some local LLMs, but they didn't do a good job (maybe my prompts sucked).
nozzlegear 21 hours ago [-]
> pronounciating
I'm not sure if you're misspelling it deliberately or not, but the word you're looking for is "pronounce" and it's verb form "pronouncing", as in "It just has issues pronouncing numbers" and "I didn't expect it to pronounce 'ms' correctly."
fc417fc802 19 hours ago [-]
He mixed pronounce with enunciate. It's an understandable mistake IMO. (English also has annunciate. Truly a cursed language in many respects.)
Maybe a dumb and slightly tangential question,
(I don't mean this as a criticism!)
but why not release a command line executable?
Even the API looks like what you'd see in a manpage.
I get it wouldn't be too much work for a user to actually make something like that,
I'm just curious what the thought process is
rohan_joshi 13 hours ago [-]
great idea, we'll do that too. we just decided to launch an onnx first and get some feedback. we'll be simplifying the process of running it everywhere including a command line executable.
daneel_w 1 days ago [-]
A very clear improvement from the first set of models you released some time ago. I'm really impressed. Thanks for sharing it all.
rohan_joshi 1 days ago [-]
thanks a lot. yeah these models are way better than our previous launch. our 15M model now is better than our previous 80M model and we expect to continue seeing this rate of improvement.
bobokaytop 12 hours ago [-]
The size/quality tradeoff here is interesting. 25MB for a TTS model that's usable is a real achievement, but the practical bottleneck for most edge deployments isn't model size -- it's the inference latency on low-power hardware and the audio streaming architecture around it. Curious how this performs on something like a Raspberry Pi 4 for real-time synthesis. The voice quality tradeoff at that size usually shows up most in prosody and sentence-final intonation rather than phoneme accuracy.
jacquesm 18 hours ago [-]
Good on device TTS is an amazing accessibility tool. Thank you for building this. Way too many of devices that use it rely on online services, this is much preferred.
rohan_joshi 17 hours ago [-]
thanks a lot for the feedback. glad you liked it. we're gonna be launching more tiny models across use-cases.
_hzw 21 hours ago [-]
I'd love to see a monolingual Japanese model sometime in the future. Qwen3-tts works for Japanese in general, but from time to time it will mix with some Mandarin in between, making it unusable.
meatmanek 19 hours ago [-]
You could try a preprocessing step where you convert to hiragana, but I guess that would lose pitch accent information (e.g. 飴 vs 雨)
_hzw 18 hours ago [-]
Exactly. Qwen only has one pitch accent for pure hiragana words, even though it actually work (removing mandarin mixed-in), which requires some great efforts to normalize text in order to disambiguate heteronyms, the result is (if you use voice cloning) your favorite CV speaking in some weird, unknown accent :)
rohan_joshi 17 hours ago [-]
our next model(eta 3ish weeks) will support Japanese. would love to get your feedback then on how the quality is. can you share what usecase you want? would love to support it.
_hzw 4 hours ago [-]
I have a pipeline of jp epub>m4b, just need to swap tts models in between :)
ks2048 1 days ago [-]
You should put examples comparing the 4 models you released - same text spoken by each.
I ran install instructions and it took 7.1GB of deps, tf you mean "tiny" ?
rohan_joshi 22 hours ago [-]
damnn, lemme fix it, sorry for that. we may have forgotten to remove the redundant dependencies. i'll comment here once i push the change. thanks a lot for trying it and giving feedback.
deathanatos 22 hours ago [-]
It's mostly torch, I think. It pulls in NVIDIA libs (which … makes sense, I guess), and NVIDIA is just not at all judicious when it comes to disk space. I literally run out of disk trying to install this on Linux.
On macOS, it's a markedly different experience: it's only ~700 MiB there; I'm assuming b/c no NVIDIA libs get pulled in, b/c why would they.
For anyone who might want to play around with this: I can get down to ~3 GiB (& about 1.3 GiB if you wipe your uv cache afterwards) on Linux if I add the following to the end of `pyproject.toml`:
[tool.uv.sources]
# This tells uv to use the specific index for torch, torchvision, and torchaudio
torch = [
{index = "pytorch-cpu"}
]
torchvision = [
{index = "pytorch-cpu"}
]
torchaudio = [
{index = "pytorch-cpu"}
]
[[tool.uv.index]]
name = "pytorch-cpu"
url = "https://download.pytorch.org/whl/cpu"
& add "torch" to the direct dependencies, b/c otherwise it seems like uv is ignoring the source? (… which of course downloads a CPU-only torch.)
That's not all the libraries, either, but you can see NVIDIA here is easily over 1 GiB.
It also then crashes for me, with:
File "KittenTTS/.venv/lib/python3.14/site-packages/pydantic/v1/fields.py", line 576, in _set_default_and_type
raise errors_.ConfigError(f'unable to infer type for attribute "{self.name}"')
pydantic.v1.errors.ConfigError: unable to infer type for attribute "REGEX"
Which seems to be [this bug in spacey](https://github.com/explosion/spaCy/issues/13895), so I'm going to have to try adding `<3.14` to `requires-python` in `pyproject.toml` too I think. That is, for anyone wanting to try this out:
(This isn't really something KittenTTS should have to do, since this is a bug in spacey … and ideally, at some point, spacey will fix it.)
Also:
+ curated-tokenizers==0.0.9
This version is so utterly ancient that there aren't wheels for it anymore, so that means a loooong wait while this builds. It's pulled in via misaki, and my editor says your one import of misaki is unused.
Hilariously, removing it breaks but only on macOS machine. I think you're using it solely for the side-effect that it tweaks phonemizer to use espeakng, but you can just do that tweak yourself, & then I think that dependency can be dropped. That drops a good number of dependencies & really speeds up the installation since we're not compiling a bunch of stuff.
You need to add `phonemizer-fork` to your dependencies. (If you remove misaki, you'll find this missing.)
rohan_joshi 16 hours ago [-]
thanks a lot for sharing this, its v helpful for fixing the env issues. we'll fix all of them by the weekend.
zeroq 18 hours ago [-]
a classic "how to draw an owl" lol :)
nsnzjznzbx 24 hours ago [-]
They sound like cartoon voices... but I really like them I could listen to a book with those.
rohan_joshi 23 hours ago [-]
yeah we tried to include those voices in this release to showcase the expressivity. but we've already started adding more professional sounding voices for prod use-cases.
a96 10 hours ago [-]
Yeah, I was wondering if it's all helium voices. Should maybe try and see or find more demos.
spyder 6 hours ago [-]
Nice, but it's weird that no "language" or "English" is mentioned on the github page, and only from the "Release multilingual TTS" Roadmap item could I guess it's probably English only for now.
altruios 1 days ago [-]
One of the core features I look for is expressive control.
Either in the form of the api via pitch/speed/volume controls, for more deterministic controls.
Or in expressive tags such as [coughs], [urgently], or [laughs in melodic ascending and descending arpeggiated gibberish babbles].
the 25MB model is amazingly good for being 25MB. How does it handle expressive tags?
rohan_joshi 1 days ago [-]
thank you so much. Right now, it cannot handle expressive tags. what kind of tags would be most helpful according to you?
altruios 1 days ago [-]
Emotion based tagging control would be the most helpful narrowing it down. Tags like [sarcastically] [happily] [joyfully] [fearfully]: so a subsection of adverbs.
A stretch goal is 'arbitrary tags' from [singing] [sung to the tune of {x}] [pausing for emphasis] [slowly decreasing speed for emphasis] [emphasizing the object of this sentence] [clapping] [car crash in the distance] [laser's pew pew].
But yeah: instruction/control via [tags] is the deciding feature for me, provided prompt adherence is strong enough.
Also: a thought...
Everyone is using [] for different kinds of tags in this space: which is very simple. Maybe it makes sense to differentiate kinds of tags? I.E. [tags for modifying how text is spoken] vs {tags for creating sounds not specifically speech: not modifying anything... but instead it's own 'sound/word'}
rohan_joshi 1 days ago [-]
yeah i think to start with, narrowing it down to a few tags would be most helpful and we'll probably start w that first. Thanks a lot!
daneel_w 1 days ago [-]
Intonation (frequency rise/fall) would offer a lot of versatility.
zeroq 18 hours ago [-]
not OP but something like [<intention>] where intention might be something like anger, curiousness, etc. [long pause], [gasp], [laughter] stuff like that.
jamamp 21 hours ago [-]
The Github readme doesn't list this: what data trained this? Was it done by the voices of the creators, or was this trained on data scraped from the internet or other archives?
arcanemachiner 21 hours ago [-]
Fingers crossed for a normal-sounding voice this time around. The cute Kitten voices are nice, but I want something I can take seriously when I'm listening to an audiobook.
rohan_joshi 21 hours ago [-]
How is the Bruno voice for this one? there will also be another release in ~15-20 days where we have more professional voices. if you'd like to get early access and give feedback lmk, or dm me.
Barbing 21 hours ago [-]
Hey Rohan, love to contribute feedback.
Huge fan of Ava multilingual and hopefully there are many other others with similar taste, so my feedback might shape things towards a halfway decent direction at least for some.
btw, use case is most often to listen to news/articles.
rohan_joshi 14 hours ago [-]
got it, this is very useful. thanks a lot.
arcanemachiner 20 hours ago [-]
Not too bad, actually! Looking forward to hearing some more voices.
No need to DM me, just post on HN or /r/LocalLLama and I'll catch wind of it.
Thanks for your work!
boutell 1 days ago [-]
Great stuff. Is your team interested in the STT problem?
rohan_joshi 1 days ago [-]
Yes, we've started working on it and will have a range of stt models v soon. lmk if you have a prod use-case in mind?
Barbing 21 hours ago [-]
Many of my use cases are similar to those of: Robert J. P. Oberg - (GitHub) ognistik
Perhaps his YouTube channel is worth a watch. This video from four months ago compares various STT tools: https://youtu.be/pKU9CABtnOw
Speaking of apps that would, if I had to guess, love to integrate you:
FluidVoice is incredible and developing quickly. Handy is really hot right now. Also have VoiceInk out there, solid iOS option.
[ps-not parent commenter]
_boffin_ 17 hours ago [-]
Thank you for this link.
rohan_joshi 16 hours ago [-]
got it, this helps a lot. thanks!
coder543 22 hours ago [-]
From my point of view, Parakeet is not very good at formatting the output, so it would be nice if a small model focused on having nicely formatted (and correct) text, not just the lowest WER score. Rewarding the model for inserting logical line breaks, quotation marks, etc.
bavell 22 hours ago [-]
Home Assistant integration a la Alexa would be awesome
ks2048 1 days ago [-]
There's a number of recent, good quality, small TTS models.
If the author doesn't describe some detail about the data, training, or a novel architecture, etc, I only assume they just took another one, do a little finetuning, and repackage as a new product.
the_duke 1 days ago [-]
Any recommendations?
Joel_Mckay 1 days ago [-]
Depends how small or complex you want a TTS, as flite + flitevox voice packages worked on pi or zynq ARM cpu just fine. =3
How did you make a very small AI model (14M) sound more natural and expressive than even bigger models?
rohan_joshi 16 hours ago [-]
glad you liked it, thank you so much for the kind words. our team is really good at squeezing performance out of small models. we are working on a new launch and hope to release a technical report along with that which includes details. fyi, our current 14M model is better than our previous 80M model. and we expect this trend to continue.
armcat 1 days ago [-]
This is awesome, well done. Been doing lot of work with voice assistants, if you can replicate voice cloning Qwen3-TTS into this small factor, you will be absolute legends!
rohan_joshi 1 days ago [-]
thanks a lot, our voice cloning model will be out by May. we're experimenting w some very cool ways of doing voice cloning at 15M but will have a range of models going upto 500M
armcat 1 days ago [-]
That's sick, looking forward to it! You have my email in the profile, please let me know when you do!
baibai008989 9 hours ago [-]
the dependency chain issue is a real barrier for edge deployment. i've been running tts models on a raspberry pi for a home automation project and anything that pulls torch + cuda makes the whole thing a non-starter. 25MB is genuinely exciting for that use case.
curious about the latency characteristics though. 1.5x realtime on a 9700 is fine for batch processing but for interactive use you need first-chunk latency under 200ms or the conversation feels broken. does anyone know if it supports streaming output or is it full-utterance only?
the phoneme-based approach should help with pronunciation consistency too. the models i've tried that work on raw text tend to mispronounce technical terms unpredictably — same word pronounced differently across runs.
oybng 7 hours ago [-]
Could you share what you're currently using?
pumanoir 1 days ago [-]
The example.py file says "it will run blazing fast on any GPU. But this example will run on CPU."
I couldn't locate how to run it on a GPU anywhere in the repo.
rohan_joshi 1 days ago [-]
thanks for the feedback. i'll add an example of running it on gpu.
stbtrax 19 hours ago [-]
Did they train this on @lauriewired's voice? The demo video sounds exactly like her at 0:18
rohan_joshi 16 hours ago [-]
i can confirm that we did not.
stbtrax 16 hours ago [-]
What's the source of that voice then in training data? It sounds insanely close to her voice. Strange parallel to openAI denying they trained on Scarlet J's voice.
magicalhippo 1 days ago [-]
A lot of good small TTS models in recent times. Most seem to struggle hard on prosody though.
Kokoro TTS for example has a very good Norwegian voice but the rhythm and emphasizing is often so out of whack the generated speech is almost incomprehensible.
Haven't had time to check this model out yet, how does it fare here? What's needed to improve the models in this area now that the voice part is more or less solved?
rohan_joshi 1 days ago [-]
small models struggle with prosody due to limited capacity. this version does much better than the precious one and is the best among other <25MB models. Kokoro is a really good model for its size, its competitive on artificial analysis too.
i think by the next release we should have something kokoro quality but a fifth of the size. Adding control for rhythm seems to be quite important too, and we should start looking at that for other languages.
magicalhippo 22 hours ago [-]
Listened to the video examples, sounded very good though wasn't terribly challenging text.
If only I could have that in Norwegian my SO would be pleased.
Also I totally misremembered regarding Kokoro TTS. It's good, but not what was butchering Norwegian. Forgot which one I was thinking of, maybe it was the old VITS stuff Rhaspy uses. Points stand, the voice was good but could barely understand what was said.
soco 1 days ago [-]
That, and also using English words in the middle of another language phrase confuses them a lot.
rohan_joshi 1 days ago [-]
yes. the current release of our model is english-only. so other languages are not expected to perform well. we'll try to look out for this in our multilingual release.
devinprater 1 days ago [-]
A lot of these models struggle with small text strings, like "next button" that screen readers are going to speak a lot.
soco 1 days ago [-]
I think I tried on my Android everything I could try and 1. outside webpage reading, not many options; 2. as browser extensions, also not many (I don't like to copy URLs in your app) 3. they all insist reading every little shit, not only buttons but also "wave arrow pointing directly right" which some people use in their texts. So basically reading text aloud is a bunch of shitty options. Anyone jumping in this market opening?
rohan_joshi 1 days ago [-]
we'd love to serve this use-case. i'll make a demo for this next week and comment here with it.
fwsgonzo 1 days ago [-]
How much work would it be to use the C++ ONNX run-time with this instead of Python? Is it a Claudeable amount of work?
The iOS version is Swift-based.
rohan_joshi 1 days ago [-]
shouldn't be hard. what backend/hardware are you interested in running this with? i'll add an example for using C++ onnx model. btw check out roadmap, our inference engine will be out 1-2 weeks and it is expected to be faster than onnx.
koolala 16 hours ago [-]
I want to run it in a website with Wasm and having the browser do the audio playback
fwsgonzo 1 days ago [-]
desktop CPUs running inference on a single background thread would be the ideal case for what I'm considering.
vezycash 1 days ago [-]
Would an Android app of this be able to replace the built in tts?
rohan_joshi 1 days ago [-]
yes, our mobile sdk is coming soon(eta 2 weeks) so we should be able to replace the built-in version of it. can you share what tts use-case you're thinking of?
satvikpendem 1 days ago [-]
I use an epub reader like Moon+ with the built in TTS to turn epubs into audiobooks, and I tried Kokoro TTS but the issue was too much lag between sentences plus it doesn't preprocess the next sentence while it reads out the current one.
rohan_joshi 1 days ago [-]
okay this seems pretty doable, i think i know someone who is working on an epub reader using kittentts. if they don't post about it, i'll do it once its done.
gabrielcsapo 1 days ago [-]
Working on a reader and server that use pockettts to turn epubs into audio books https://github.com/gabrielcsapo/compendus shows a virtual scroller for the text and audio
agnishom 18 hours ago [-]
I thought they were going to make kitten sounds instead of speech
rohan_joshi 16 hours ago [-]
for that, a 100KB model could be enough ;)
casey2 18 hours ago [-]
I guess they are Discord kittens?
tim-projects 14 hours ago [-]
Only American voices? For some reason I'm only interested in Irish, British or Welsh accents. American is a no
foo42 12 hours ago [-]
minor nit to pick: Welsh accents are British accents as Wales is in Britain. In fact by some definitions it's the most British part.
People from outside the UK often use British as synonymous with English, and in the context of accents, often a South East English accent or some sort of Received Pronunciation (RP) accent. Technically a "British" accent could be from anywhere in England, Scotland, or Wales, and therefore by extension might not even be the English language.
While I'm here, since it's generally confusing, the UK is Great Britain and Northern Ireland. Great Britain is England, Scotland, and Wales.
tim-projects 7 hours ago [-]
I am actually English but I'm so used to speaking with international people I instinctively say British instead of English - because that's what people expect.
So being factually correct doesn't really matter. Nobody cares and nobody wants to learn so I adapt for them.
In the same way I almost exclusively write with American spelling now. Life is just easier when you stop fighting.
Stevvo 13 hours ago [-]
Found they struggle with numbers. Like, give them a random four digit number in a sentence and it fumbles.
pabs3 15 hours ago [-]
Is this open-source or open-weights ML?
rohan_joshi 14 hours ago [-]
yes, indeed. we are working on adding mit licensed phonemizers too by this weekend, so you'll be able to use these models as you like :)
pabs3 12 hours ago [-]
I think you misunderstood the question. I guess its only open-weights not open-source then.
For some insight into the original question, take a look at the Debian ML policy:
Is there any way to do a custom voice as a DIY? Or we need to go through you? If so, would you consider making a pricing page for purchasing a license/alternative voice? All but one of the voices are unusable in a business context.
rohan_joshi 1 days ago [-]
thanks a lot for the feedback. yes, we're working on a diy way to add custom voices and will also be releasing a model with more professional voices in the next 2-3 weeks. as of now, we're providing commercial support for custom voices, languages and deployment through the support form on our github. can you share more about your business use-case? if possible, i'd like to ensure the next release can serve that.
ilaksh 1 days ago [-]
Right now it's outgoing calls for a small business client that checks information. Although if they call back they don't mind an automated system, on outgoing calls the person answering will often hang up if they detect AI right away, so we use a realistic custom voice with an accent.
This is a mind numbing task that requires workers to make hundreds of calls each day with only minor variations, sometimes navigating phone trees, half the time leaving almost the exact same message.
Anyway, I believe almost all such businesses will be automated within months. Human labour just cannot compete on cost.
RobMurray 4 hours ago [-]
I don't like the sound of that. Why do humans always need to spoil new advancements by finding the worst use cases?
amelius 23 hours ago [-]
How long until I can buy this as a chip for my Arduino projects?
rohan_joshi 22 hours ago [-]
not v long. until then you start running tts on phones, wearables and r pis. at the model level, we'll have a model for this kind of mcu's later this year.
yjftsjthsd-h 20 hours ago [-]
You can (just about?) already run on a pi zero, right? That's not literally a chip, but in practical utility it can't be very different
amelius 9 hours ago [-]
A CPU will probably consume much more power.
sroussey 16 hours ago [-]
It is based on onnx, so can i use with transformers.js and the browser?
This would be great as a js package - 25mb is small enough that I think it'd be worth it (in-browser tts is still pretty bad and varies by browser)
rohan_joshi 1 days ago [-]
great idea, we're on it. we're also working on a mobile sdk. a browser sdk would be really cool too.
great_psy 1 days ago [-]
Thanks for working on this!
Is there any way to get those running on iPhone ? I would love to have the ability for it to read articles to me like a podcast.
rohan_joshi 1 days ago [-]
yes, we're releasing an official mobile sdk and inference engine very soon. if you want to use something until then, some folks from the oss community have built ways to run kitten on ios. if you search kittentts ios on github you should find a few.
if you cant find it, feel free to ping me and i can help you set it up. thanks a lot for your support and feedback!
erkoo 11 hours ago [-]
How noticeable is the difference in quality between the 4M model and the 80M model?
rsmtjohn 13 hours ago [-]
The <25MB figure is what stands out. Been wanting to add TTS to a few Next.js projects for offline/edge scenarios but model sizes have always made it impractical to ship.
At 25MB you can actually bundle it with the app. Going to test whether this works in a Vercel Edge Function context -- if latency is acceptable there it opens up a lot of use cases that currently require a round-trip to a hosted API.
sschueller 1 days ago [-]
I'm still looking for the "perfect" setup in order to clone my voice and use it locally to send voice replies in telegram via openclaw. Does anyone have auch a setup?
I want to be my own personal assistant...
EDIT: I can provide it a RTX 3080ti.
ilaksh 1 days ago [-]
You need to provide info on your hardware. Pocket-TTS does cloning on CPU, but for me randomly outputs something pretty weird sounding mixed in with like 90% good outputs. So it hasn't been quite stable enough to run without checking output. But maybe it depends on your voice sample.
Qwen 3 TTS is good for voice cloning but requires GPU of some sort.
nicpottier 1 days ago [-]
Try training a model on piper, you will need to record a lot of utterances but the results are pretty great and the output is a fast TTS model.
justanotherunit 1 days ago [-]
Is it not just to train a model on your voice recordings and just use that to generate audio clips from text?
bdbdbdb 23 hours ago [-]
Why not just send text replies? You can already do that
schopra909 1 days ago [-]
Really cool to see innovation in terms of quality of tiny models. Great work!
rohan_joshi 1 days ago [-]
thanks a lot. small model quality is improving exponentially. This 15M is way better than the 80M model from our previous launch (V0.1).
gabrielcsapo 1 days ago [-]
are there plans to output text alignment?
rohan_joshi 1 days ago [-]
yes, we just started working on this yesterday haha, great that you mentioned it. once we have it working it'll be out soon.
gabrielcsapo 1 days ago [-]
that would be awesome, I was using pockettts then I had to run it through whisper to get the accurate alignment. Not super productive for realtime work.
janice1999 1 days ago [-]
What's the actual install size for a working example? Like similar "tiny" projects, do these models actually require installing 1GB+ of dependencies?
deathanatos 1 days ago [-]
Running the example is 3 MiB for the repo, +667 MiB of Python dependencies, +86 MiB of models that will get downloaded from HuggingFace. =756 MiB.
(That's using the example as-is. If you switch it to the smaller model, modify the above with +57 MiB of models from HuggingFace, or =727 MiB.)
So I toyed with this a bit + the Rust library "ort", and ort is only 224M in release (non-debug) mode, and it was pretty simple to run this model with it. (I did not know ort before just now.) I didn't replicate the preprocessing the Python does before running the model, though. (You have to turn the text into an array of floats, essentially; the library is doing text -> phonemes -> tokens; the latter step is straight-forward.)
deathanatos 22 hours ago [-]
So, that was on macOS. It's actually huge on Linux, and I've run out of disk space trying to pull dependencies. It's nvidia, who always shows great judgement in their use of disk.
wedowhatwedo 1 days ago [-]
My quick test showed 670m of python libraries required on top of the model.
wiradikusuma 1 days ago [-]
I'm thinking of giving "voice" to my virtual pets (think Pokemon but less than a dozen). The pets are made up animals but based on real animal, like Mouseier from Mouse (something like that). Is this possible?
Tldr: generate human-like voice based on animal sound. Anyway maybe it doesn't make sense.
rohan_joshi 1 days ago [-]
it'd be an interesting experiment to try what kind of information is extracted from the samples of the pet sounds. it'd be so cool if it can just get the features of the audio and then still be able to reproduce the audio in english lol. we would need a really good "speaker" encoder i think.
Tacite 1 days ago [-]
Is it English only?
rohan_joshi 1 days ago [-]
as of now its english only. the training for multilingual model is underway and should be out in April! what languages are you most interested in? Right now, we are providing deployments for custom languages + voices through support form on the github.
ivm 1 days ago [-]
Spanish would be great, there's a serious lack of Spanish TTS on Android compared to iOS and the quality is not the best.
rohan_joshi 22 hours ago [-]
spanish model will be out in a matter of weeks.
jorgejiro 4 hours ago [-]
Great, thanks
hattimaTim 13 hours ago [-]
Here to suggest the Bengali language! It has the 7th largest speaker base worldwide but often ignored by tech companies, sadly.
Zopieux 1 days ago [-]
French, Spanish, German would go a long way.
rohan_joshi 22 hours ago [-]
french, spanish and german models will also be out v soon. these are languages we are working on already. some lower resource languages will take longer.
whitepaper27 1 days ago [-]
This is great. Demo looks awesome.
rohan_joshi 1 days ago [-]
thanks, glad you liked it
pabs3 15 hours ago [-]
Whats the training data for this?
phyzix5761 15 hours ago [-]
Sounds like the voice actors from Critical Role but I just came off of watching 48 hours of Campaign 3 so I'm probably imagining things.
deathanatos 19 hours ago [-]
So, one thing I noticed, and this could easily be user error, is that if I set the text & voice in the example to:
text ="""
Hello world. This is Kitten TTS.
Look, it's working!
"""
voice = 'Luna'
On macOS, I get "Kitten TTS", but on Linux, I get "Kit… TTS". Both OSes generate the same phonemes of,
Phonemes: ðɪs ɪz kˈɪʔn ̩ tˌiːtˌiːˈɛs ,
which makes me really confused as to where it's going off the rails on Linux, since from there it should just be invoking the model.
edit: it really helps to use the same model facepalm. It's the 80M model, and it happens on both OS. Wildly the nano gets it better? I'm going to join the Discord lol.
rohan_joshi 16 hours ago [-]
hey sorry for this issue, i think its a bug in our preprocessing. let me look into it and help fix it. i think you posted this in our discord so lets carry the conversation there.
exe34 24 hours ago [-]
sounds amazing! does it stream? or is it so fast you don't need to?
rohan_joshi 22 hours ago [-]
it can support chunk streaming, i'm working on adding it to the repo. should be up by tomorrow.
moralestapia 24 hours ago [-]
Wow, what an amazing feat. Congratulations!
rohan_joshi 22 hours ago [-]
thank you so much. glad you liked the model.
tredre3 21 hours ago [-]
This is something I've been looking for (the <50MB models in particular). Unfortunately my feedback is as follows:
Downloading https://github.com/KittenML/KittenTTS/releases/download/0.8.1/kittentts-0.8.1-py3-none-any.whl (22 kB)
Collecting num2words (from kittentts==0.8.1)
Using cached num2words-0.5.14-py3-none-any.whl.metadata (13 kB)
Collecting spacy (from kittentts==0.8.1)
Using cached spacy-3.8.11-cp314-cp314-win_amd64.whl.metadata (28 kB)
Collecting espeakng_loader (from kittentts==0.8.1)
Using cached espeakng_loader-0.2.4-py3-none-win_amd64.whl.metadata (1.3 kB)
INFO: pip is looking at multiple versions of kittentts to determine which version is compatible with other requirements. This could take a while.
ERROR: Ignored the following versions that require a different python version: 0.7.10 Requires-Python >=3.8,<3.13; 0.7.11 Requires-Python >=3.8,<3.13; 0.7.12 Requires-Python >=3.8,<3.13; 0.7.13 Requires-Python >=3.8,<3.13; 0.7.14 Requires-Python >=3.8,<3.13; 0.7.15 Requires-Python >=3.8,<3.13; 0.7.16 Requires-Python >=3.8,<3.13; 0.7.17 Requires-Python >=3.8,<3.13; 0.7.5 Requires-Python >=3.8,<3.13; 0.7.6 Requires-Python >=3.8,<3.13; 0.7.7 Requires-Python >=3.8,<3.13; 0.7.8 Requires-Python >=3.8,<3.13; 0.7.9 Requires-Python >=3.8,<3.13; 0.8.0 Requires-Python >=3.8,<3.13; 0.8.1 Requires-Python >=3.8,<3.13; 0.8.2 Requires-Python >=3.8,<3.13; 0.8.3 Requires-Python >=3.8,<3.13; 0.8.4 Requires-Python >=3.8,<3.13; 0.9.0 Requires-Python >=3.8,<3.13; 0.9.2 Requires-Python >=3.8,<3.13; 0.9.3 Requires-Python >=3.8,<3.13; 0.9.4 Requires-Python >=3.8,<3.13; 3.8.3 Requires-Python >=3.9,<3.13; 3.8.5 Requires-Python >=3.9,<3.13; 3.8.6 Requires-Python >=3.9,<3.13; 3.8.7 Requires-Python >=3.9,<3.14; 3.8.8 Requires-Python >=3.9,<3.14; 3.8.9 Requires-Python >=3.9,<3.14
ERROR: Could not find a version that satisfies the requirement misaki>=0.9.4 (from kittentts) (from versions: 0.1.0, 0.3.0, 0.3.5, 0.3.9, 0.4.0, 0.4.4, 0.4.5, 0.4.6, 0.4.7, 0.4.8, 0.4.9, 0.5.0, 0.5.1, 0.5.2, 0.5.3, 0.5.4, 0.5.5, 0.5.6, 0.5.7, 0.5.8, 0.5.9, 0.6.0, 0.6.1, 0.6.2, 0.6.3, 0.6.4, 0.6.5, 0.6.6, 0.6.7, 0.7.0, 0.7.1, 0.7.2, 0.7.3, 0.7.4)
ERROR: No matching distribution found for misaki>=0.9.4
I realize that I can run a multiple versions of python on my system, and use venv to managed them (or whatever equivalent is now trendy), but as I near retirement age all those deep dependencies nets required by modern software is really depressing me. Have you ever tried to build a node app that hasn't been updated in 18 months? It can't be done. Old man yelling at cloud I guess shrugs.
rohan_joshi 21 hours ago [-]
this is some env issue sorry for the inconvenience, lemme fix it. can you dm me w your env? discord / github / mail / anywhere works.
catbot_dev 5 hours ago [-]
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JulianPembroke 10 hours ago [-]
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takahitoyoneda 7 hours ago [-]
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eddie-wang 19 hours ago [-]
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Remi_Etien 1 days ago [-]
25MB is impressive. What's the tradeoff vs the 80M model — is it mainly voice quality or does it also affect pronunciation accuracy on less common words?
rohan_joshi 1 days ago [-]
80M model is the highest quality while also being quite efficient. it is superior in terms of pronunciation accuracy for less common words, and also is more stable in terms of speed. its my fav model. i think the 40M is quite similar to 80M for most usecases. 15M is for resource cpus, loading onto a browser etc.
The new 15M is way better than the previous 80M model(v0.1). So we're able to predictably improve the quality which is very encouraging.
BTW, it seems that kitten (the Python package) has the following chain of dependencies: kittentts → misaki[en] → spacy-curated-transformers
So if you install it directly via uv, it will pull torch and NVIDIA CUDA packages (several GB), which are not needed to run kitten.
In case it helps anyone else, the first time I tried to run purr I got "OSError: PortAudio library not found". Installing libportaudio (apt install libportaudio2) got it running.
https://github.com/ilyaizen/CopySpeak
I'm impressed with the quality given the size. I don't love the voices, but it's not bad. Running on an intel 9700 CPU, it's about 1.5x realtime using the 80M model. It wasn't any faster running on a 3080 GPU though.
Regarding running on the 3080 gpu, can you share more details on github issues, discord or email? it should be blazing fast on that. i'll add an example to run the model on gpu too.
Had to get the right Python version and make sure it didn't break anything with the previous Python version. A friend suggested using Docker, so I started down that path until I realized I'd probably have to set the whole thing up there myself. Eventually got it to run and I think I didn't break anything else.
I hate Python so much.
I suspect success is highly variable on macOS vs. Linux; the spacey bug is only in newer (3.14 only or later) Pythons, which Linux will have.
I should learn to give up quicker.
I did eventually do that though, and I'm pretty sure I had to mess about with installing and uninstalling torch.
I dread using anything made in python because of this. It's always annoying and never just works (if the version of python is incompatible, otherwise it's fine) .
Even if you have to install using pip it just affect the active environment.
Maybe I'm only trying simple things.
my current best approach is wrapping around gemini-flash native, and the model speaking the text i send it, which allows me end to end latency under a second.
are there other models at this or better pricing i can be looking at.
I didn't expect it to pronounciate 'ms' correctly, but the number sounded just like noise. Eventually I got an acceptable result for the string "Startup finished in one hundred and thirty five seconds.
The above SECDED check-bit encoding can be implemented in a similar way, but since it uses only three-bit patterns, mapping syndromes to correction masks can be done with three-input AND gates.
It sounded quite good indeed for the normal English stuff, but I guess predictably was quite bad at the domain-specific words. It misspoke "SECDED", had wrong emphasis on "syndromes", and pronounced "AND gates" like "and gates".
Could you give some example of what kind of preprocessing would help in this case? I tried some local LLMs, but they didn't do a good job (maybe my prompts sucked).
I'm not sure if you're misspelling it deliberately or not, but the word you're looking for is "pronounce" and it's verb form "pronouncing", as in "It just has issues pronouncing numbers" and "I didn't expect it to pronounce 'ms' correctly."
https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/enunciate#English
Maybe a dumb and slightly tangential question, (I don't mean this as a criticism!) but why not release a command line executable?
Even the API looks like what you'd see in a manpage.
I get it wouldn't be too much work for a user to actually make something like that, I'm just curious what the thought process is
On macOS, it's a markedly different experience: it's only ~700 MiB there; I'm assuming b/c no NVIDIA libs get pulled in, b/c why would they.
For anyone who might want to play around with this: I can get down to ~3 GiB (& about 1.3 GiB if you wipe your uv cache afterwards) on Linux if I add the following to the end of `pyproject.toml`:
& add "torch" to the direct dependencies, b/c otherwise it seems like uv is ignoring the source? (… which of course downloads a CPU-only torch.)This is an example of what one sees under Linux:
That's not all the libraries, either, but you can see NVIDIA here is easily over 1 GiB.It also then crashes for me, with:
Which seems to be [this bug in spacey](https://github.com/explosion/spaCy/issues/13895), so I'm going to have to try adding `<3.14` to `requires-python` in `pyproject.toml` too I think. That is, for anyone wanting to try this out: (This isn't really something KittenTTS should have to do, since this is a bug in spacey … and ideally, at some point, spacey will fix it.)Also:
This version is so utterly ancient that there aren't wheels for it anymore, so that means a loooong wait while this builds. It's pulled in via misaki, and my editor says your one import of misaki is unused.Hilariously, removing it breaks but only on macOS machine. I think you're using it solely for the side-effect that it tweaks phonemizer to use espeakng, but you can just do that tweak yourself, & then I think that dependency can be dropped. That drops a good number of dependencies & really speeds up the installation since we're not compiling a bunch of stuff.
You need to add `phonemizer-fork` to your dependencies. (If you remove misaki, you'll find this missing.)
Either in the form of the api via pitch/speed/volume controls, for more deterministic controls.
Or in expressive tags such as [coughs], [urgently], or [laughs in melodic ascending and descending arpeggiated gibberish babbles].
the 25MB model is amazingly good for being 25MB. How does it handle expressive tags?
A stretch goal is 'arbitrary tags' from [singing] [sung to the tune of {x}] [pausing for emphasis] [slowly decreasing speed for emphasis] [emphasizing the object of this sentence] [clapping] [car crash in the distance] [laser's pew pew].
But yeah: instruction/control via [tags] is the deciding feature for me, provided prompt adherence is strong enough.
Also: a thought...
Everyone is using [] for different kinds of tags in this space: which is very simple. Maybe it makes sense to differentiate kinds of tags? I.E. [tags for modifying how text is spoken] vs {tags for creating sounds not specifically speech: not modifying anything... but instead it's own 'sound/word'}
Huge fan of Ava multilingual and hopefully there are many other others with similar taste, so my feedback might shape things towards a halfway decent direction at least for some.
btw, use case is most often to listen to news/articles.
No need to DM me, just post on HN or /r/LocalLLama and I'll catch wind of it.
Thanks for your work!
Perhaps his YouTube channel is worth a watch. This video from four months ago compares various STT tools: https://youtu.be/pKU9CABtnOw
Speaking of apps that would, if I had to guess, love to integrate you:
FluidVoice is incredible and developing quickly. Handy is really hot right now. Also have VoiceInk out there, solid iOS option.
[ps-not parent commenter]
If the author doesn't describe some detail about the data, training, or a novel architecture, etc, I only assume they just took another one, do a little finetuning, and repackage as a new product.
Also:
https://github.com/sparkaudio/spark-tts
curious about the latency characteristics though. 1.5x realtime on a 9700 is fine for batch processing but for interactive use you need first-chunk latency under 200ms or the conversation feels broken. does anyone know if it supports streaming output or is it full-utterance only?
the phoneme-based approach should help with pronunciation consistency too. the models i've tried that work on raw text tend to mispronounce technical terms unpredictably — same word pronounced differently across runs.
I couldn't locate how to run it on a GPU anywhere in the repo.
Kokoro TTS for example has a very good Norwegian voice but the rhythm and emphasizing is often so out of whack the generated speech is almost incomprehensible.
Haven't had time to check this model out yet, how does it fare here? What's needed to improve the models in this area now that the voice part is more or less solved?
If only I could have that in Norwegian my SO would be pleased.
Also I totally misremembered regarding Kokoro TTS. It's good, but not what was butchering Norwegian. Forgot which one I was thinking of, maybe it was the old VITS stuff Rhaspy uses. Points stand, the voice was good but could barely understand what was said.
The iOS version is Swift-based.
People from outside the UK often use British as synonymous with English, and in the context of accents, often a South East English accent or some sort of Received Pronunciation (RP) accent. Technically a "British" accent could be from anywhere in England, Scotland, or Wales, and therefore by extension might not even be the English language.
While I'm here, since it's generally confusing, the UK is Great Britain and Northern Ireland. Great Britain is England, Scotland, and Wales.
So being factually correct doesn't really matter. Nobody cares and nobody wants to learn so I adapt for them.
In the same way I almost exclusively write with American spelling now. Life is just easier when you stop fighting.
For some insight into the original question, take a look at the Debian ML policy:
https://salsa.debian.org/deeplearning-team/ml-policy
Is there any way to do a custom voice as a DIY? Or we need to go through you? If so, would you consider making a pricing page for purchasing a license/alternative voice? All but one of the voices are unusable in a business context.
This is a mind numbing task that requires workers to make hundreds of calls each day with only minor variations, sometimes navigating phone trees, half the time leaving almost the exact same message.
Anyway, I believe almost all such businesses will be automated within months. Human labour just cannot compete on cost.
Is there any way to get those running on iPhone ? I would love to have the ability for it to read articles to me like a podcast.
At 25MB you can actually bundle it with the app. Going to test whether this works in a Vercel Edge Function context -- if latency is acceptable there it opens up a lot of use cases that currently require a round-trip to a hosted API.
I want to be my own personal assistant...
EDIT: I can provide it a RTX 3080ti.
Qwen 3 TTS is good for voice cloning but requires GPU of some sort.
(That's using the example as-is. If you switch it to the smaller model, modify the above with +57 MiB of models from HuggingFace, or =727 MiB.)
So I toyed with this a bit + the Rust library "ort", and ort is only 224M in release (non-debug) mode, and it was pretty simple to run this model with it. (I did not know ort before just now.) I didn't replicate the preprocessing the Python does before running the model, though. (You have to turn the text into an array of floats, essentially; the library is doing text -> phonemes -> tokens; the latter step is straight-forward.)
Tldr: generate human-like voice based on animal sound. Anyway maybe it doesn't make sense.
edit: it really helps to use the same model facepalm. It's the 80M model, and it happens on both OS. Wildly the nano gets it better? I'm going to join the Discord lol.
The new 15M is way better than the previous 80M model(v0.1). So we're able to predictably improve the quality which is very encouraging.