Built-in app profile
Outlook
Context-aware voice typing for Outlook
TalkMore helps Outlook users move from spoken work notes to direct email prose, keeping the tone professional while preserving the facts the speaker actually provided.
What you said
“In Outlook, note that the budget review is Thursday, not Wednesday, and ask Priya to bring the latest forecast.”
OpenTypeless writes
Hi Priya, The budget review is on Thursday, not Wednesday. Please bring the latest forecast, Priya.
What changes here
OpenTypeless shapes the draft around Outlook while keeping final control with you.
Tone
Outlook schedule updates where a corrected time must replace an earlier one.
Structure
For Outlook, TalkMore treats the draft as workplace email. It sharpens the ask, resolves spoken corrections to the final value, and avoids adding meeting promises, formal closings, or recipients not spoken by the user.
Review boundary
OpenTypeless prepares text for review in Outlook. If the app is unknown, it uses the General fallback instead of app-specific assumptions.
Workflow
Use voice around Outlook without claiming direct app access.
Outlook schedule updates where a corrected time must replace an earlier one.
Outlook status replies that need a professional tone without long rewriting.
Outlook follow-ups that should state the action clearly and stop there.
Setup
Keep the same desktop flow, then tune the final text for this app.
Step 1
Start from the Outlook field you are editing
Open the composer, editor, comment box, or reply area in Outlook. TalkMore treats Outlook as the place where the final text will be used, so the wording stays close to that surface instead of becoming a generic transcript.
Step 2
Speak the thought in your normal order
Dictate the point, correction, and requested action for Outlook without stopping to manually rewrite every clause. The email profile is tuned for business email replies, scheduling updates, and concise workplace requests, so it can keep the useful meaning while cleaning the phrasing.
Step 3
Review the app-shaped output before sending
Read the TalkMore result in Outlook, especially names, dates, numbers, negations, and requested actions. The profile is designed to preserve what you said, but you stay in control before anything leaves the draft field.
Step 4
Keep private context out unless Outlook needs it
Add only the context that should appear in the Outlook text itself. TalkMore does not need raw app history, page content, or hidden account details to shape the dictated sentence, so the safest workflow is to speak the facts you want reflected and leave unrelated private context out.
Privacy and limits
OpenTypeless prepares text for you to review. It does not claim account access, endorsement, or a dedicated connection with Outlook. Unknown apps use the General fallback instead of app-specific assumptions.
Related profiles
Same-family pages for similar voice workflows.
FAQ
Does TalkMore connect to my Outlook account?
No. The Outlook profile describes how TalkMore shapes dictated text for that writing surface. It does not require account access to Outlook, does not claim special product status, and does not need private account data to describe the right writing style.
Will TalkMore send text automatically from Outlook?
No. TalkMore prepares text for Outlook; you review and send, post, save, or submit it yourself. That keeps final control with the person writing in Outlook, which is important when the dictated note includes customer details, project dates, or teammate requests.
What should I check before using the Outlook result?
For Outlook, check proper names, final dates, numbers, requested actions, and any correction you spoke. TalkMore is meant to reduce rewriting, not replace judgment on sensitive or high-stakes text, so the final review should confirm the result still matches your intended meaning.
Download OpenTypeless
Use one desktop voice workflow across Outlook, related apps, and the broader context-aware voice typing flow.