Who is not tormented by voice messages on WhatsApp? Who has no friends who instead of writing something in three lines send you a three -minute voice message? As far as I am concerned, except very rare cases (such as Emilio Pappagallo, the director of Radio Rock, whose audio messages always listen to willingly even when very long both because they are intelligent and because I seem to have a private version of his morning show), vocal messages are the disaster for many friendships and relationships. People speak too much. Or it speaks too little and takes revenge with the voice messages that seem podcast.
But finally Meta understood it, which introduced a WhatsApp function to transcribe audio messages into text. You can activate it in the settings menu, but don’t think you are safe, because you risk finding transcriptions that will look like a piece of Joyce’s inner monologue of Molly Bloom.
But I have a solution: activate the transcription of the vocal message, perhaps of your wife or husband who lasts an infinite number of time. Then copy the text into the chatgpt and ask the AI to make a summary. Which most likely, skimming all the invented, will be of the type: “What do you eat tonight for dinner?”.