Built-in app profile
Apple Messages
TalkMore helps Apple Messages users turn spoken personal notes into natural chat replies that keep the point clear and preserve the latest correction.
What you said
“In Apple Messages, say dinner is at 7:30, not 7, and ask Jamie to bring the tickets.”
OpenTypeless writes
Dinner is at 7:30, not 7. Jamie, can you bring the tickets?
OpenTypeless shapes the draft around Apple Messages while keeping final control with you.
Apple Messages replies where a changed time must be clear.
For Apple Messages, TalkMore favors short, human wording. It cleans up hesitation, keeps the final date or time, and avoids adding greetings, emojis, or promises that the speaker did not say.
OpenTypeless prepares text for review in Apple Messages. If the app is unknown, it uses the General fallback instead of app-specific assumptions.
Use voice around Apple Messages without claiming direct app access.
Apple Messages replies where a changed time must be clear.
Apple Messages plans that should sound casual and direct.
Apple Messages follow-ups that need cleanup without formal email tone.
Keep the same desktop flow, then tune the final text for this app.
Step 1
Open the composer, editor, comment box, or reply area in Apple Messages. TalkMore treats Apple Messages 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
Dictate the point, correction, and requested action for Apple Messages without stopping to manually rewrite every clause. The personal chat profile is tuned for personal replies, quick plans, and corrected everyday notes, so it can keep the useful meaning while cleaning the phrasing.
Step 3
Read the TalkMore result in Apple Messages, 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
Add only the context that should appear in the Apple Messages 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.
OpenTypeless prepares text for you to review. It does not claim account access, endorsement, or a dedicated connection with Apple Messages. Unknown apps use the General fallback instead of app-specific assumptions.
Same-family pages for similar voice workflows.
No. The Apple Messages profile describes how TalkMore shapes dictated text for that writing surface. It does not require account access to Apple Messages, does not claim special product status, and does not need private account data to describe the right writing style.
No. TalkMore prepares text for Apple Messages; you review and send, post, save, or submit it yourself. That keeps final control with the person writing in Apple Messages, which is important when the dictated note includes customer details, project dates, or teammate requests.
For Apple Messages, 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.
Use one desktop voice workflow across Apple Messages, related apps, and the broader context-aware voice typing flow.