My concern is that cases like this would set the precedent that synthetic voices can't be too close to the voice of a real, famous person. But where does that leave us? There's been lots of famous people since the recording age, and the number is only going to increase. It seems unlikely that you can distinguish your fake voice from every somewhat public/famous real voice in existence, especially going forward. Will this not result in a situation where the synthetic voices must either sound clearly fake and non-human to not be confused with an existing famous voice, or the companies/producers must in every case pay royalties to the owner to a famous voice that sounds similarly close, even if their intent wasn't even to copy said voice or any that are similar, to avoid them getting sued afterwards? Are we going to pay famous people for being famous?
Thank you, this is very cool. It'll probably replace my current "keep a random vscode/sublime tab" method of notekeeping.
Shift+Alt+Down clones the current line, but this is not indicated in the keybinds info.
Since the next large version will add the feature to customize the buffer storage path, perhaps it's only a small leap from there to add save/load of different buffer files? I imagine it would already be possible at that point by changing the path and reloading or restarting the program, but a slightly more UX friendly version would be neat.