EchoLive is a free personal content platform that lets you save articles, follow RSS feeds, highlight and annotate — and listen to everything with natural-sounding voices.
The average knowledge worker saves dozens of articles per week and reads a fraction of them. Browser bookmarks pile up. Newsletter inboxes overflow. Read-it-later queues grow endlessly. The irony is that we have never had better tools for finding content — and no good way to actually consume it all.
The problem is not any single tool. It is a fact that content management has always been fragmented. People juggle a bookmarking app, an RSS reader, a highlighting tool, a text-to-speech service, and a podcast player — five disconnected apps that do not talk to each other. What if all of it lived in one place?
That is the idea behind EchoLive, a free platform from Voxiven LLC that brings together article saving, RSS feeds, highlights and annotations, smart search, and audio playback into a single personal content ecosystem. Save from anywhere. Organize with structure. Consume however you want — read it, listen to it, or get an AI summary.
Save Everything, From Everywhere
EchoLive starts where most tools stop. Using browser extensions for Chrome, Firefox, and Edge — or the iOS share sheet on mobile — users can capture full articles, bookmarks, images, screenshots, and text selections from any website. Unlike simple bookmarking tools that store URLs and hope the page stays online, EchoLive extracts the full article text, images, and metadata at the moment you save. If the original page goes behind a paywall, gets redesigned, or disappears entirely, your content is still there.
Every saved item lands in a unified library with support for tags, collections, color-coded highlights, attached notes, and smart search that finds content by meaning — not just keywords. It is less like a bookmark folder and more like a personal research library.
Follow Your Sources — 100 Feeds Free
Saving is reactive — you find something and clip it. But staying informed requires proactive content flow. EchoLive includes a full-featured RSS feed reader that brings new content to you automatically.
Free users get 100 feed subscriptions with automatic refresh — more than most paid RSS readers offer. The reader includes keyboard shortcuts for power users (j, k, o, m, s, v — the same keys used by Gmail and Feedly), mark-as-read on scroll, folder organization, date and status filters, and OPML import and export so there is never any lock-in.
Feed articles integrate directly with EchoLive’s save and audio features. Star an article in your feed and it becomes a saved item you can highlight, annotate, and listen to later. The line between discovering content and managing it disappears.

EchoLive’s RSS feed reader with keyboard navigation, folders, and auto-refresh for up to 100 free subscriptions.
Read It or Listen to It — Your Choice
What makes EchoLive fundamentally different from every other content tool is audio. Every article, feed item, or saved page can be converted to spoken audio with one click. The platform offers over 630 voice options across more than 100 languages — expressive neural voices that sound natural, not robotic.
“Everyone saves articles they never get back to,” says Stanly Thomas, founder of Voxiven LLC. “EchoLive turns that growing backlog into something you can actually finish — on your commute, at the gym, while cooking. If you can listen to a podcast, you can listen to your saved articles.”
Audio capabilities include:
- Word-level sync — text highlights in real time as audio plays, creating a read-along experience
- Daily Brief — a personalized audio briefing each morning combining your feeds and trending stories
- Listening streaks — daily habit tracking where just 30 seconds of listening keeps your streak alive
- Offline playback — download audio on mobile and listen without an internet connection
- AI summaries — long articles condensed into 3-5 minute audio digests
- Pulse — trending stories curated from across the web, ready to read or listen instantly
For professionals producing narrated content, EchoLive’s Studio editor provides multi-segment editing with per-section voice selection, pronunciation controls, and export in MP3, WAV, and professional timeline formats.
Highlight, Annotate, and Actually Remember What You Read
Passive reading leads to passive forgetting. EchoLive includes built-in tools for active reading: select any passage in a saved article, apply a color-coded highlight, and attach a note. Your highlights and annotations are searchable, exportable, and always available alongside the source article.
For researchers, students, and anyone building a personal knowledge base, this turns EchoLive from a consumption tool into a retention tool. Save the article, highlight the key insights, export your notes to Notion or Obsidian, and listen to the full piece during your commute.

Saved articles with color-coded highlights, tags, and notes in a unified library.
Who Is Building a Personal Content Library?
EchoLive serves anyone who consumes more content than they can get through. Commuters who want to hear articles during their drive. Students converting research papers into audio study material. Professionals managing dozens of RSS feeds and industry newsletters. People with ADHD or reading difficulties who absorb information better through audio. Researchers who need to save, highlight, and annotate across hundreds of sources. Content creators producing narrated articles and audio newsletters.
What connects them is a shared frustration: content is everywhere, but no single tool has ever handled the full lifecycle — discover, save, organize, read, listen, and remember. EchoLive does.
A Category in Transition
EchoLive’s launch comes at a moment of unusual disruption in the content tools space. Mozilla’s Pocket, the dominant read-it-later tool for over a decade with 30+ million users, is winding down. Omnivore, a popular open-source alternative, was acquired and shut down. Microsoft’s Edge Collections is being retired. Instapaper has seen minimal updates in years.
At the same time, RSS is experiencing a quiet renaissance among knowledge workers who are tired of algorithmic social feeds and want direct control over their information sources.
EchoLive is not positioning itself as a replacement for any single tool. It is building the category that should have existed all along: a unified personal content platform where everything you save, follow, read, and listen to lives in one place.
Available Now — Free to Start
EchoLive is free to use with generous limits. The free tier includes 100 RSS feeds with auto-refresh, 15 AI summaries per day, 10 automatic audio generations per day, 60 minutes of podcast transcription per month, and unlimited article saving with tags, collections, highlights, and notes. No credit card required.
Web App: https://app.echolive.co
iOS App: https://apps.apple.com/us/app/echolive-read-listen-create/id6759710451
Browser Extensions: Available for Chrome, Firefox, and Edge
About Voxiven LLC
Voxiven LLC is a software company based in Dover, Delaware, building tools that transform how people manage and consume digital content. Its flagship product, EchoLive, combines content saving, RSS feeds, annotations, and natural-sounding audio playback in a single platform. The company’s mission: all your content, one place — read or listen.
Learn more at https://echolive.co
Media Contact
Name: Stanly Thomas, Founder
Company: Voxiven LLC
Email: hello@voxiven.com
Website: https://echolive.co
Social Media:
- LinkedIn: https://linkedin.com/company/voxiven
- X (Twitter): https://x.com/echoliveapp
- YouTube: https://youtube.com/@echoliveapp
- Instagram: https://instagram.com/echolive_app
- Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61585327595890
- EchoLive — All Your Content. One Place. Read or Listen.
- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z9EN7DoQsns
