IT Home reported on February 9 that Microsoft recently released Windows 11 version 26052 (canary and dev preview), hiding some interesting content under the official changelog.
According to information discovered by PhentomofEarth, a user of the X platform, Microsoft is working on a new accessibility feature for Windows 11 called "Speak for Me."
This feature is not yet available in version 26052, but you can already see the settings page, including upcoming features and their descriptions. The feature allows users to teach Windows 11 how to speak in their personal voice. Apple has recently implemented the same capability, and Microsoft is about to design a similar capability for Windows 11.
According to the feature description in the Settings app, Windows 11 will allow users to "create their own voice avatar or keep their voice" and then use it for face-to-face or ** meetings.
Like other accessibility features, Speak for Me also has a dedicated shortcut that users can quickly turn on when the feature goes live.
Image source neowinit home with opening tutorial:
From GitHub **vivetool, and extract its files into a folder that is easy to find.
Launch the Command Prompt as an administrator.
Use the cd command to navigate to the folder that contains the vivetool file. For example, cd c: vive.
Enter the command vivetol ennable id:47123936 and press enter.
Restart your computer and you'll see the settings.