热门产品

Lispr

Lispr

Lispr 是一款跨平台语音听写与翻译工具,用户按住按键说话即可在任意应用中输入,支持99种语言和32种语言翻译,低延迟。

热门评论

PH 用户
Hey Product Hunt 👋

I'm Konstantin, co-founder of Codebridge, a software development company. Lispr's first user was me.

Why I built it

My workday is Claude Code sessions, client emails, Teams threads, and spec reviews: thousands of words typed across a dozen apps. Then I noticed that when I dictated instead of typing, I got several times more done. The effect was strongest with AI tools. When you talk to Claude or Cursor, you give whole paragraphs of context you'd never bother to type, and the answers get far better. Typing made me ration what I told the AI.

I wanted one tool that types wherever my cursor is: chat, email, code editor, browser. I tried what was on the market and kept hitting the same walls: multi-gigabyte model downloads, accounts, subscriptions, or latency that sent me back to the keyboard. We're a dev company, so we built our own.

The multilingual part is personal too. We're a Ukrainian company. Ukrainian inside the team, English with clients, and many of our people live abroad and run daily life in a third language. So translation got its own keys: you set two, and holding one along with the dictation key changes what happens when you let go. Release with just the dictation key and you get the transcript; release with a translation key held and the translation lands instead. When you drift between languages mid-sentence (we all do), Lispr follows. No setup, no mode switch.

What Lispr is

A free voice dictation and translation app for Mac and Windows. Hold the key, speak, release. Your words land in whatever app your cursor is in. Hold a translation key too, and on release the translation lands instead of the transcript.

Where it earns its keep:Draft Slack messages and emails without touching the keyboardPrompt Claude, ChatGPT, and Cursor by voice, with far richer context than you'd typeWrite in Notion, Docs, anywhere text goesSpeak in ~99 languages, switch mid-sentenceTeach it your vocabulary, so client names and jargon come out spelled rightDictate in one language, release, and it lands in another of 32, via two configurable per-language keys. No other Mac dictation tool has this.

Speed and footprint

Median latency is 346 ms from key-release to text on screen, measured server-side on live traffic. The whole app is a 3.67 MB download, with no model file and no GPU requirement. It runs on macOS 11 and later, including Intel Macs, and on Windows.

Privacy, the specifics

Your microphone is off until you hold the key.Audio streams to a hosted Whisper large-v3-turbo model for transcription. Our servers don't store it, and no transcript content is logged anywhere. The inference provider holds audio up to 30 days only for abuse review, then deletes it.Nothing trains on your voice, transcripts, or translations unless you opt in, and the opt-in is double-gated.No account. Download, grant mic permission, start talking.

Is there a catch?

No. Lispr is free and the free tier stays. Codebridge is a profitable consulting company, and Lispr's architecture pays per call, so infrastructure costs scale with usage, not with always-on GPU capacity. It costs us very little to keep free. If we ever add a paid tier, it will be for heavy or team-scale use, never for everyday dictation.

For the PH community

We're reading and answering every comment today. What gets named in this thread will shape what we build next: iOS and Android are already on the list, and the requests here move up the queue.

What I'd love from youDownload it and tell me where it trips: lispr.aiWhich languages do you work in? We built this for multilingual days, and I'm curious how multilingual this community is.

Thanks to our early users in 29+ countries for finding the rough edges, and to @myroslav_budzanivskyi, our CTO, who took Lispr from first commit to a notarized public release in a single day, then shipped 67 releases in the three weeks after.

Konstantin
PH 用户
Nice one. I added voice input to my own app recently and the hard part wasn't transcription at all, it was getting the mic to behave the same on every device. Does hold to talk work in any text field system wide, or is it per app? Congrats on the launch, hope it goes well today!
PH 用户
the no-account, stateless-relay answer to the audit question above was refreshingly honest, more teams would just say "we don't log anything" and leave it there. that raises a question about the vocabulary feature though - if it learns client names and jargon from my dictations over time, that's a profile of sorts even without an account. is that vocabulary list stored purely on-device, or does it live server-side somewhere tied to an install id, since "no persistent identity" and "the app remembers your jargon across sessions" seem like they need to be reconciled somehow
PH 用户
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.
PH 用户
Congrats for you! Wondering how it handles contexts like coding tools versus marketing or social writing, since those are pretty different voice-to-text use cases.
PH 用户
发布日就要结束了,我想在结束前说声谢谢。感谢每一位投票、评论、提出关于隐私和架构的尖锐问题、报告顽固的触发键、以及今天用Lispr说出第一条语音消息的人——是你们成就了这一天。这个帖子里提出的问题已经改变了我们的路线图笔记,这比任何徽章都更有价值。

Lispr依然免费,明天工作继续,这里的每一条回复我都会看。如果你今天安装了它,一周后告诉我它用得怎么样。
热门产品Konstantin Karpushin2026-07-09原文

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