Built-in app profiles

Use cases

Browse 71 built-in app profiles for context-aware voice typing across email, chat, documents, code, support, and social writing.

Direct answer

OpenTypeless adapts dictated text to the app where you write.

The catalog is a browsing guide for app-aware behavior, not a marketplace of connected accounts. Pick an app profile to see how OpenTypeless can shape the same spoken thought for that writing surface, then review the result before using it.

What this page is for

Use it when you want to know whether an app has a built-in profile, what kind of output OpenTypeless prepares there, and when the General fallback is the safer path.

New catalog pages stay noindex until they are reviewed for search. The directory exists first to help users compare workflows without opening a batch of thin pages.

App-aware examples

How app-aware voice typing works

The words you say can stay the same while the final writing changes to fit the place where you are typing.

Email replies

Turn a spoken note into a clear reply with a greeting, spacing, and a direct ask before you send it.

Team chat

Keep the same thought shorter and more conversational for Slack, Teams, Discord, and other chat surfaces.

Documents

Shape dictated ideas into notes, outlines, or paragraphs that fit docs instead of sending one long transcript.

Code and prompts

Clean up rough technical thoughts into prompts, issue comments, and code-adjacent writing you can review first.

Writing behavior

What changes by app

App context should change the writing format, not the facts. OpenTypeless keeps the spoken intent intact and adjusts the output only where the app profile gives a clear reason.

Tone changes between email, chat, docs, support, social, and developer tools.
Structure changes from paragraphs to bullets, replies, notes, or prompt-ready text.
Length changes so quick chat stays short while docs can keep more context.
Terminology changes only when the app profile gives a useful writing cue.

Privacy and limits

App names and logos are nominative compatibility identifiers. OpenTypeless does not claim endorsement, partnership, certification, account access, or a dedicated connection with the apps listed here.

Unknown apps use the General fallback instead of guessing a dedicated profile. You always review the prepared text before using it.

Raw app detector signals and internal prompt rules are not shown here. This page explains visible writing behavior in human terms.

Browse by workflow

Browse app profiles

Start with a writing workflow, then open a profile to see examples, limits, and fallback behavior.

71 of 71 profiles

App names and logos are nominative compatibility identifiers. OpenTypeless prepares text for you to review and does not claim endorsement, partnership, certification, account access, or a dedicated connection with the apps listed here.