Listen to Ars Technica as Audio
Deep tech analysis and science reporting, narrated for your ears
Ars Technica has been the gold standard for in-depth tech journalism since 1998 — delivering thorough analysis of hardware, software, science, and policy that goes deeper than any other tech publication. Their articles are often 2,000–4,000 words of detailed, expert-level reporting. speakeasy converts Ars articles into audio so you can stay at the cutting edge of tech knowledge during commutes and workouts. With speakeasy, converting Ars Technica content to audio is as simple as sharing a link. Our extraction engine is optimized for Ars Technica's page structure, ensuring clean text extraction even from complex layouts. Once converted, your audio syncs across all your Apple devices through iCloud, ready to play whenever you are.
How it works
Why Ars Technica content works great as audio
Ars Technica is home to some of the web's most compelling news analysis, reviews, features, science reporting, policy coverage. The platform's writers tend to produce well-structured, text-rich articles that convert beautifully to audio. Unlike heavily visual platforms, Ars Technica's content is primarily text-based, which means almost nothing is lost in the audio conversion.
This makes Ars Technica one of the best sources for building an audio listening library. Whether you follow specific writers or browse by topic, there's always a steady stream of new content worth converting. speakeasy's natural AI voices bring these articles to life, preserving the author's tone and pacing in a way that feels authentic.
Getting started with Ars Technica audio
The fastest way to start listening to Ars Technica content is through the iOS share sheet. When you find an article on Ars Technica that you want to hear, tap the share button and select speakeasy. The app extracts the text, converts it to audio, and adds it to your library — all in a matter of seconds.
You can also copy and paste Ars Technica URLs directly into speakeasy's input field. This works from any device, making it easy to queue articles from your desktop browser for later listening on your phone. speakeasy handles Ars Technica's specific page structure and formatting, so the extracted text is clean and well-organized for audio playback.
Best practices for Ars Technica listening
To get the most out of listening to Ars Technica content, consider building a routine around it. Many users queue 3-5 articles in the evening and listen during their morning commute. This creates a natural habit that helps you stay current with the Ars Technica writers and topics you care about.
For longer Ars Technica articles (10+ minutes of audio), consider using a slightly slower playback speed to catch nuances. For news and commentary pieces, 1.3-1.5x often works well. speakeasy remembers your playback position, so you can pause mid-article and resume exactly where you left off.
Building a Ars Technica audio collection
Over time, your collection of converted Ars Technica articles becomes a valuable personal resource. Unlike bookmarking (where articles pile up unread), audio conversion ensures you actually consume the content. speakeasy's library keeps everything organized with titles, sources, and dates, making it easy to revisit favorites.
The iCloud sync means your entire Ars Technica audio collection is available on both iPhone and Mac. Start an article on your phone during your commute, then finish it on your MacBook at your desk. For prolific Ars Technica readers, this workflow can easily replace 30-60 minutes of daily screen time with productive audio content.
Why Ars Technica is great for audio
Ars Technica's text-rich content converts cleanly to natural-sounding audio
One-tap conversion via the iOS share sheet or URL paste
Articles sync across all your Apple devices through iCloud
Build a personal audio library of your favorite Ars Technica content
Ars Technica at a glance
- Content types
- News analysis, reviews, features, science reporting, policy coverage
- Typical length
- 5–20 minute reads
- Popular topics
- HardwareSoftwareSpace & ScienceSecurityPolicy & LawGaming
Why speakeasy for Ars Technica?
Ars Technica's trademark thoroughness produces articles that are information-dense and technically precise. speakeasy's neural voices handle this content well — technical terminology, product names, and scientific concepts are narrated naturally. Perfect for the reader who wants depth, not soundbites.
Frequently asked questions







Turn any article into natural-sounding audio. Paste a link, press play, and stay informed while you move.
Coming soon on Android