Launching today
Lispr
Hold a key, speak, and Lispr writes it anywhere
140 followers
Hold a key, speak, and Lispr writes it anywhere
140 followers
Lispr is a free voice dictation and translation app for Mac and Windows. Hold a key, speak, release. Your words land in whatever app your cursor is in. Speak in ~99 languages and switch mid-sentence. Hold your translation key as well, and the translation lands instead, in any of 32 languages. Median latency 346 ms. The mic is off until you hold the key, and we never store your audio. No account, no model download, free.









Lispr
I do marketing for Lispr. But I'm writing this as its heaviest user, because the tool changed how I work before it ever became my job to talk about it.
The biggest surprise was my AI workflow. When I typed prompts, I kept them short and got generic answers back. Speaking, I give the model two minutes of context, examples, and constraints without thinking about my fingers, and the answers improved to the point where colleagues asked what I changed.
The second thing: I live in Poland and run my life in three languages. Ukrainian with family, English at work, Polish everywhere else. Switching the output language is one extra key held at release, so I think in Ukrainian and the message lands in English. Of everything in the app this is what I'd pay for.
Ask me anything about how we use it day to day. The founders are in this thread too.
I've been using Lispr on my mac almost every day, and it's honestly become one of those apps I keep coming back to. I work in marketing and also do mentoring, so I spend a huge chunk of my day writing feedback, docs, slack messages, briefs etc. It doesn't magically write everything for me, but it cuts the time I spend writing by a lot. Funny enough, I used Lispr to write this review too 😄
If your job involves writing a lot, I'd definitely recommend giving it a try.
Lispr
@katrya_syrotynska A review dictated through the product it reviews. That's the best QA report we got today 😄 Thank you!
"It doesn't write everything for me, but it cuts the time" is exactly the bar we aim for. Lispr types what you say and stays out of the rest. Curious which part of your day it took over first: the Slack messages or the briefs?
@konstantin_karpushin1 definitely Slack first! I write a lot of feedback during the day, so that was an instant win. Briefs were next. At this point, if I know I'm about to write more than a sentence, I instinctively open Lispr 🙏
Lispr
@katrya_syrotynska "More than a sentence" is the threshold we hear from users again and again. Below it, typing wins. Above it, speaking does.
One tip for the feedback and briefs: add your clients' and product names in the Vocabulary section of settings. Lispr also learns new terms from your dictations once a day, but seeding the important names gets the spelling right from the first dictation. Thanks for being here today 🙏
Rectify
Just downloaded and I'm using LISPR to write this message. Seems like a great tool. All the best with the launch.
Lispr
@umar_lateef Thanks Umar! A comment dictated with Lispr on launch day is the best kind of upvote. If anything feels rough in the first days of use, tell me here, that feedback shapes what we build next.