Electronic devices that talk with many voices. 

If you've spent more than a few minutes with a Speak&Math you may have noticed that one voice sample that doesn't match the others – the clip announcing the game "Greater Than / Less Than". It sounds like a whole different person recorded it because... that's what happened. (For the curious, 99er.net/spkmath.html explains!) This was a haunting fascination for a much younger me.

Fast forward nearly four decades to now; the device in question is a cheap but perfectly functional Bluetooth adapter for my headphones. Most of the voice clips ("device on", "power low", and so on) are kinda low-quality, noisy, trimmed-too-short recordings of someone with a difficult-to-place North American accent... but one or two clips sound like they were recorded with a somewhat improved setup a feature a wholly different voice with a British accent. Nowadays, this doesn't seem wondrous so much as careless, but it's still fascinating.

Anyone got any other interesting examples of this multiple-voice phenomenon?

Electronic devices that talk with many voices. 

@ElectricKeet Google voice does this a lot. It'll switch between a fairly natural voice and 90s text to speech voice.

re: Electronic devices that talk with many voices. 

@Doephin I can't decide if that's surprising to me or not. I feel like Google products are one big psychological experiment to start with.

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