Mac speech to text

Mac speech to text with a shortcut that feels native

OpenTypeless gives Mac users a simple Fn voice input flow for everyday writing: record from anywhere, transcribe with your chosen STT provider, polish the text, and insert it into the current app.

OpenTypeless desktop
OpenTypeless voice input flow running as a desktop dictation app
The desktop flow is intentionally short: shortcut, speech, transcript, polished output.
Default Mac shortcut
Fn
Good for
Notes, chat, docs, browsers
Provider choice
Cloud or local STT
Output
Polished text, not raw transcript

Mac already has Dictation. Why add OpenTypeless?

Apple Dictation is good for simple input. The friction starts when you want a stable app-wide workflow, better control over the speech engine, consistent post-processing, or a custom dictionary for names and professional vocabulary.

OpenTypeless now uses a Typeless-style Fn default for dictation and Fn+Space for Ask Anything. If you previously searched for an Option+/ style shortcut, you can still choose a nearby custom shortcut in settings.

Shortcut choices on Mac

The default shortcut matters because it is the first thing a Mac user feels.

Why Fn

It matches the current Mac default

Fn is simple to explain, easy to press, and aligned with the current OpenTypeless desktop shortcut model.

Can I use Option+/?

Custom shortcuts still work

If another workflow trained you on Option+/ or a similar shortcut, use settings to choose a custom combination that fits your keyboard.

Why not Command alone

Command combinations collide quickly

Many Command shortcuts already belong to apps and macOS, so OpenTypeless keeps the default minimal and configurable.

Mac setup checklist

A good Mac setup should be predictable before the user starts changing providers.

1

Install the macOS build

Download OpenTypeless, open it, and allow any required macOS permissions for microphone access and text insertion.

2

Confirm the shortcut

Use Fn as the current Mac default. If another app or keyboard layout conflicts, choose a nearby custom shortcut from settings.

3

Choose STT and polishing

Start with a cloud STT provider for fast setup, or configure local Whisper through Ollama when privacy matters more.

4

Test in your real apps

Try Notes, Slack, Chrome, VS Code, and email so you can catch permission or shortcut conflicts early.

Mac Dictation vs OpenTypeless

Apple Dictation is convenient. OpenTypeless is for users who want more control over the entire writing result.

NeedDefault pathOpenTypeless path
Shortcut claritySystem-controlled Dictation shortcut, often Fn-basedFn dictation default with configurable hotkey
Provider controlUses Apple system dictationPick STT providers based on speed, cost, language, or privacy
AI cleanupBasic transcript outputOptional LLM polishing before the text is inserted
Custom wordsLimited control for product names and jargonCustom dictionary for repeated vocabulary
Cross-platform consistencyMac-only system behaviorSame app model on macOS, Windows, and Linux

What the workflow looks like in the product UI

The page is not just a feature list: these are the product UI surfaces users touch when they dictate, configure, review output, and ask by voice.

Capture and insert
OpenTypeless main screen for desktop voice input capture and insertion
Provider settings
OpenTypeless settings screen for speech-to-text and AI provider configuration
History and review
OpenTypeless history screen for reviewing previous voice input results
Ask Anything
OpenTypeless Ask Anything voice question panel and compact answer preview
Workflow pointProduct evidenceWhy it matters
Ask AnythingVoice question panelAsk a question by voice, wait while it is processed, and read the final answer in a small floating note.
Writing in any appCapture and insertUse the same voice input habit in browsers, editors, documents, chat tools, and note apps.
Polished outputProvider settingsTurn spoken fragments into clearer sentences before the text reaches the target app.
Language flexibilityHistory and reviewChoose providers that perform well for your language or accent instead of accepting one fixed engine.

Where Mac users feel the difference

The most useful improvements are practical: fewer corrections, fewer confusing shortcuts, and less app switching.

Writing in any app

Use the same voice input habit in browsers, editors, documents, chat tools, and note apps.

Polished output

Turn spoken fragments into clearer sentences before the text reaches the target app.

Language flexibility

Choose providers that perform well for your language or accent instead of accepting one fixed engine.

Local-first option

Use local STT and local LLMs when the conversation, note, or draft should stay on your machine.

FAQ

Short answers for users comparing tools.

What should I press on Mac?

The current Mac default is Fn for dictation and Fn+Space for Ask Anything. You can still configure a different shortcut in settings.

Can I use an Option+/ style shortcut?

Yes. Fn is the current default, but OpenTypeless lets you configure the hotkey if another shortcut fits your keyboard or muscle memory better.

Does OpenTypeless replace Apple Dictation?

It can replace it for daily writing, but Apple Dictation remains useful for simple cases. OpenTypeless is better when you need AI cleanup, provider choice, custom vocabulary, and consistent app-wide behavior.

Can I use it privately on Mac?

Yes. With local providers such as Ollama, you can run local speech-to-text and local AI polishing instead of sending audio or text to a cloud provider.

Try the desktop voice input workflow

Start with the default setup, then tune providers, prompts, shortcuts, and local mode as your workflow becomes clearer.