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Lispr

Lispr does one thing: hold a key, speak, release, and your words appear wherever your cursor is sitting — any app, any text field, no paste step. That sounds like a thin feature, but the execution detail matters. The hold-to-talk model means there is no activation word, no mode-switching, and no recording indicator to dismiss. It just types. The differentiator over system-level dictation is that it targets the input cursor rather than routing through a clipboard or a dedicated dictation window, which means it works in places like code editors and terminal prompts where OS dictation often fails or behaves oddly. Practical use cases for a founder: drafting Slack replies, filling in Notion fields, writing commit messages without breaking keyboard flow. Reservation: the pitch is very thin on accuracy benchmarks and language support, and the value evaporates fast if latency is perceptible on slower machines. -> Best for: solo founder or indie hacker who composes a lot of short-form text across many apps
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