Ilya Morozov is a Russian independent developer whose small catalogue is built around the single, long-lived utility Balabolka, a Windows text-to-speech application that has quietly become a reference tool for students, proof-readers, language learners and accessibility professionals. The program accepts an unusually wide spectrum of document formats—DOCX, EPUB, PDF, HTML, MOBI, ODT, PDB and plain text—and feeds them through any SAPI voice installed on the PC, letting users convert reading material into MP3, WAV, OGG or WMA audio for offline listening. Controls for pronunciation substitution, bookmarking, pitch, rate and volume give narrations a degree of polish normally expected from commercial TTS suites, while batch processing and command-line switches allow teachers or podcasters to turn entire libraries into speech with minimal interaction. Built-in spell-check, a clipboard monitor and a magnifier round out the accessibility feature set, and the portable build can run from a USB stick on public machines. Although the interface is utilitarian, steady updates have added Microsoft Speech Platform support, global hotkeys, LRC lyric-file export and integration with online TTS services, keeping the utility current as Windows evolves. Balabolka is available for free on get.nero.com, where it is delivered through trusted Windows package sources such as winget, always installs the latest release, and can be pulled down in bulk alongside other applications.
A Text-To-Speech (TTS) program
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