AI tool comparison
Gemini 3.1 Flash TTS vs Parlor
Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.
Audio & Voice
Gemini 3.1 Flash TTS
Google's TTS API with conversational voice direction and 70+ languages
75%
Panel ship
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Community
Free
Entry
Google has launched a new text-to-speech API built on the Gemini 3.1 Flash model, introducing a notably different interface from traditional TTS systems. Rather than selecting from a dropdown of preset voices, developers describe the voice they want in natural language — tone, pacing, emotional register, regional accent — and the model interprets those instructions. Multi-speaker dialogue is supported in a single API call, with different voice characteristics per speaker. The API covers 70+ languages with high fidelity across all of them, including real-time streaming output for low-latency use cases. Inline audio tags in the prompt let developers mark specific phrases for different treatment — whispering a secret, emphasizing a warning, letting a character laugh mid-sentence. This level of fine-grained control without manual audio editing is new for a production-grade API. Priced competitively with a free tier through the Gemini API and enterprise availability via Vertex AI. Positioned directly against ElevenLabs, Deepgram, and Cartesia. The conversational direction interface in particular is a departure from the incumbent approach and could significantly lower the barrier for developers building audio-first products.
Voice & Audio AI
Parlor
Real-time voice + vision AI that runs 100% on your local machine
75%
Panel ship
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Community
Paid
Entry
Parlor is an open-source Python/FastAPI app that gives you a fully local, real-time multimodal AI assistant — you speak to it and show it your camera, and it responds with synthesized voice, all on-device. It uses Gemma 4 for vision and language understanding and Kokoro for text-to-speech, delivering end-to-end latency of around 2.5-3 seconds on an Apple M3 Pro without touching any cloud API. What makes Parlor stand out is barge-in support — you can interrupt the AI mid-sentence, just like a real conversation — and cross-platform inference: MLX on macOS for GPU acceleration, ONNX on Linux. The creator benchmarked 83 tokens/second on an M3 Pro and provided reproducible setup instructions in under ten lines of shell. It surfaced on Hacker News as a 'Show HN' post and quickly accumulated over 50 upvotes, with developers praising the honest latency numbers and the fact that the entire stack — from audio capture to TTS playback — is open-sourceable and self-hostable with no API key required.
Reviewer scorecard
“The natural language voice direction is legitimately new — I've been building with ElevenLabs and the voice selection process has always been tedious trial-and-error. Being able to say 'calm, slightly British, measured pace' and get that is a real quality-of-life improvement. Multi-speaker in a single call is also a huge convenience for dialogue-heavy apps.”
“Finally a local voice+vision stack that actually benchmarks its own latency instead of hiding behind vague demos. The MLX path on Apple Silicon is fast, barge-in works, and the codebase is small enough to fork and own. This is the foundation I'd build a personal assistant on.”
“Natural language voice direction sounds great in demos but may be unpredictable in production — you can't guarantee the same voice characteristics across API calls without exact prompt pinning. ElevenLabs and Cartesia offer voice IDs for reproducibility. Also, Google's track record with deprecating APIs makes long-term commitment to this TTS service uncertain.”
“2.5-3 second latency is fine for demos but painfully slow for natural conversation — real barge-in at that speed still feels robotic. And Gemma 4 as the vision model is a step behind GPT-4V or Claude in accuracy. Until latency drops to sub-second, this is a weekend project, not a daily driver.”
“Voice as a fully programmable medium — described in natural language rather than parameterized — is a paradigm shift. Combined with real-time streaming, this makes high-quality audio generation available to any developer, not just audio specialists. The long-term trajectory is voice as just another output modality in any AI product.”
“The local-first AI assistant with eyes and ears is the endgame for ambient computing. Parlor is the earliest working prototype of a future where your laptop has a persistent, private AI companion that sees what you see. Get familiar with this architecture now — it will be mainstream in 18 months.”
“For audiobook production, podcast automation, and multilingual content this is immediately useful. The inline audio tags for within-sentence expression changes are exactly what creators have been asking for — no more splitting scripts into dozens of segments to get natural emotional delivery.”
“Being able to point my camera at a draft design and ask what's wrong with this layout while talking out loud — all offline — is genuinely useful. The voice output quality from Kokoro is surprisingly good. I'd use this during creative sessions where I don't want to type.”
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