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Listen To This

Paste an article to listen to it in your podcast app

Productivity
Audio
Online Learning

Paste any article URL and it shows up in your preferred podcast app, ready to listen. You can also add pdfs, and or copy paste the text directly. As you send articles to your podcast feed, you can choose to translate, summarize and/or reframe each articles with different styles (e.g. "Explain like I'm five") Finally, If you don't have an article you want, you can also choose topics you care about and we'll deliver one great article each day to your podcast feed.

Top comment

Nice idea @nickabouzeid ! Can users customize the voice or tone of the narration, or is it fixed?

Comment highlights

Hey guys, congrats on the launch, your app seems genuinely useful to podcast listeners. Does the whole thing run on a Chrome extension or is it on top?

Anyway, upvoted you and I wish you a good launch!

What people use most full article mode, summaries, or topic based daily picks?

Do you only support English (UK/US?) at the moment? Plans on adding more languages?

Congrats on the launch, @nickabouzeid & @ignacio_vinke2. Good product. I audited the homepage. The [turn any article into a podcast] line is clear. But the hero section has two CTAs fighting each other — "Start free" and "Try free — no card needed."

A visitor lands and doesn't know which to click. Pick one. Make it obvious.

Also, the sample audio is your strongest proof. But it's buried under "choose topics." A visitor scrolling might miss it. Let people hear the quality before they read about features.

The Chrome extension is a smart touch. Appreciate it. But... it's hidden at the bottom. A user looking to save articles on the go might not find it. Move it up.

Took a screenshot to show what I mean.

Spotted 3 other things that could cost you.

Anyhow, congratulations.

Like the simplicity here. Compared to NotebookLM, this feels less like a deep thinking companion and more like a practical listening layer for the content I already want to consume. Different job, different moment. How you see users balancing this with tools like NotebookLM: do you see this as a complementary product, or more as a completely different habit?