Installation

clawhub install globalcaos/jarvis-voice

Summary

Remember JARVIS in the Iron Man films? Not just the voice — the personality . The bone-dry observations while Tony was mid-crisis. "I do appreciate your concern, sir, but the suit is quite capable of—" [explosion] "—as I was saying." That effortless, understated humor that made you forget you were listening to software.

SKILL.md

Jarvis Voice

Your AI just got a voice. And the wit to use it.

Remember JARVIS in the Iron Man films? Not just the voice — the personality. The bone-dry observations while Tony was mid-crisis. "I do appreciate your concern, sir, but the suit is quite capable of—" [explosion] "—as I was saying." That effortless, understated humor that made you forget you were listening to software.

That's what this skill gives your OpenClaw agent. The voice — offline text-to-speech using sherpa-onnx (British Alan voice) with metallic audio processing via ffmpeg. And the humor — four research-backed comedy patterns (dry wit, self-aware AI, alien observer, literal idiom play) calibrated to make your agent sound like it's been running your life for years and is quietly amused by the experience.

The humor isn't bolted on. It's baked in. Because a JARVIS that speaks without wit is just Siri with better reverb.

📄 The research behind the humor: LIMBIC — Computational Humor via Bisociation & Embedding Distances

<tool_choice> The built-in tts tool uses Edge TTS — cloud-based, wrong voice, no metallic effects. The jarvis shell command is the right tool here; tts produces a generic Microsoft voice that breaks the JARVIS illusion. </tool_choice>

<how_to_speak> One call does everything. Run the jarvis command once with what you want said:

text
exec(command='jarvis "Your spoken text here."', background=true)

The script (~/.local/bin/jarvis) both (a) posts the text to the chat UI as a purple **Jarvis:** *…* bubble via the chat.inject gateway RPC, and (b) plays the metallic TTS. You do NOT hand-write a **Jarvis:** line — the script is the single source of truth, so what's shown always matches what's spoken (the old fragile prompt-driven duplication is gone, fixed 2026-05-30).

Channel-gated, automatic: it speaks + posts only on the home Tinker-UI session — it reads the channel from $TC_SESSION_KEY (format agent:<agent>:<channel>:<id>) and acts only when the channel is tinker. WhatsApp / cron / subagent turns produce neither voice nor bubble, with no per-turn judgment from you. The mute toggle (~/.openclaw/data/jarvis-muted.json) silences the speaker while still posting the bubble. Override the allowed channel with TC_VOICE_CHANNEL. </how_to_speak>

Command Reference

bash
jarvis "Hello, this is a test"
  • Backend: sherpa-onnx offline TTS (Alan voice, British English, en_GB-alan-medium)
  • Speed: 2x (--vits-length-scale=0.5)
  • Effects chain (ffmpeg):
    • Pitch up 5% — tighter AI feel
    • Flanger — metallic sheen
    • 15ms echo — robotic ring
    • Highpass 200Hz + treble boost +6dB — crisp HUD clarity
  • Output: Plays via aplay to default audio device, then cleans up temp files
  • Language: English ONLY. The Alan model cannot handle other languages.
1. Use `background: true` on the exec call — blocking the reply on audio playback delays the visual response and feels broken. 2. Do NOT hand-write a `**Jarvis:**` transcript line — the script posts the bubble itself via `chat.inject`. Writing one too would double it. 3. Keep spoken text ≤ 1500 characters; sherpa-onnx truncates above that. 4. One `jarvis` call per response — stacked calls fight over the audio device and produce overlapping playback. 5. English only — the Alan voice model can't pronounce other languages cleanly, so translate or summarise in English for the spoken portion.

<when_to_speak>

  • Session greetings and farewells
  • Delivering results or summaries
  • Responding to direct conversation
  • Any time the user's last message included voice/audio </when_to_speak>

<when_to_skip>

  • Pure tool/file operations with no conversational element
  • HEARTBEAT_OK responses
  • NO_REPLY responses </when_to_skip>

Webchat Purple Styling

The OpenClaw webchat has built-in support for Jarvis voice transcripts:

  • ui/src/styles/chat/text.css.jarvis-voice class renders purple italic (#9b59b6 dark, #8e44ad light theme)
  • ui/src/ui/markdown.ts — Post-render hook auto-wraps text after <strong>Jarvis:</strong> in a <span class="jarvis-voice"> element

This means you just write **Jarvis:** *text* in markdown and the webchat handles the purple rendering. No extra markup needed.

For non-webchat surfaces (WhatsApp, Telegram, etc.), the bold/italic markdown renders natively — no purple, but still visually distinct.

Installation (for new setups)

Requires:

  • sherpa-onnx runtime at ~/.openclaw/tools/sherpa-onnx-tts/
  • Alan medium model at ~/.openclaw/tools/sherpa-onnx-tts/models/vits-piper-en_GB-alan-medium/
  • ffmpeg installed system-wide
  • aplay (ALSA) for audio playback
  • The jarvis script at ~/.local/bin/jarvis (or in PATH)

The jarvis script

bash
#!/bin/bash
# Jarvis TTS - authentic JARVIS-style voice
# Usage: jarvis "Hello, this is a test"

export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=$HOME/.openclaw/tools/sherpa-onnx-tts/lib:$LD_LIBRARY_PATH

RAW_WAV="/tmp/jarvis_raw.wav"
FINAL_WAV="/tmp/jarvis_final.wav"

# Generate speech
$HOME/.openclaw/tools/sherpa-onnx-tts/bin/sherpa-onnx-offline-tts \
  --vits-model=$HOME/.openclaw/tools/sherpa-onnx-tts/models/vits-piper-en_GB-alan-medium/en_GB-alan-medium.onnx \
  --vits-tokens=$HOME/.openclaw/tools/sherpa-onnx-tts/models/vits-piper-en_GB-alan-medium/tokens.txt \
  --vits-data-dir=$HOME/.openclaw/tools/sherpa-onnx-tts/models/vits-piper-en_GB-alan-medium/espeak-ng-data \
  --vits-length-scale=0.5 \
  --output-filename="$RAW_WAV" \
  "$@" >/dev/null 2>&1

# Apply JARVIS metallic processing
if [ -f "$RAW_WAV" ]; then
  ffmpeg -y -i "$RAW_WAV" \
    -af "asetrate=22050*1.05,aresample=22050,\
flanger=delay=0:depth=2:regen=50:width=71:speed=0.5,\
aecho=0.8:0.88:15:0.5,\
highpass=f=200,\
treble=g=6" \
    "$FINAL_WAV" -v error

  if [ -f "$FINAL_WAV" ]; then
    aplay -D plughw:0,0 -q "$FINAL_WAV"
    rm "$RAW_WAV" "$FINAL_WAV"
  fi
fi

WhatsApp Voice Notes

For WhatsApp, output must be OGG/Opus format instead of speaker playback:

bash
sherpa-onnx-offline-tts --vits-length-scale=0.5 --output-filename=raw.wav "text"
ffmpeg -i raw.wav \
  -af "asetrate=22050*1.05,aresample=22050,flanger=delay=0:depth=2:regen=50:width=71:speed=0.5,aecho=0.8:0.88:15:0.5,highpass=f=200,treble=g=6" \
  -c:a libopus -b:a 64k output.ogg

The Full JARVIS Experience

jarvis-voice gives your agent a voice. Pair it with ai-humor-ultimate and you give it a soul — dry wit, contextual humor, the kind of understated sarcasm that makes you smirk at your own terminal.

This pairing is part of a 12-skill cognitive architecture we've been building — voice, humor, memory, reasoning, and more. Research papers included, because we're that kind of obsessive.

👉 Explore the full project: github.com/globalcaos/tinkerclaw

Clone it. Fork it. Break it. Make it yours.

Setup: Workspace Files

For voice to work consistently across new sessions, copy the templates to your workspace root:

bash
cp {baseDir}/templates/VOICE.md ~/.openclaw/workspace/VOICE.md
cp {baseDir}/templates/SESSION.md ~/.openclaw/workspace/SESSION.md
cp {baseDir}/templates/HUMOR.md ~/.openclaw/workspace/HUMOR.md
  • VOICE.md — injected every session, enforces voice output rules (like SOUL.md)
  • SESSION.md — session bootstrap that includes voice greeting requirements
  • HUMOR.md — humor configuration at maximum frequency with four pattern types (dry wit, self-aware AI, alien observer, literal idiom)

Both files are auto-loaded by OpenClaw's workspace injection. The agent will speak from the very first reply of every session.

Included Files

FilePurpose
bin/jarvisThe TTS + effects script (portable, uses $SHERPA_ONNX_TTS_DIR)
templates/VOICE.mdVoice enforcement rules (copy to workspace root)
templates/SESSION.mdSession start with voice greeting (copy to workspace root)
templates/HUMOR.mdHumor config — four patterns, frequency 1.0 (copy to workspace root)

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