I used to be someone who hated talking to my devices. I never sent WeChat voice messages to friends. I never used voice mode with AI in the past few years. Because I hated hearing my own voice, and speaking to a device just felt awkward.
But I am starting to realize: voice is a far more native, intuitive, and productive way to work with AI day to day, whether you are coding or brainstorming.
Why?
→ Speaking is simply way faster than typing.
→ You can talk even when your hands are busy. Cooking, driving, whatever. The conversation keeps going.
We've all seen Iron Man, where Tony Stark talks to Jarvis instead of typing. That is the future of AI, so I decided to adapt.
What I have been using:
→ The native voice input built into each app (you can just talk to ChatGPT directly)
→ Typeless, which has been great
To fully commit, I even bought a microphone and set it up on my desk so speaking comes naturally.
The experience has been mind blowing and I am loving it. Maybe I am late to the party, but hey, better late than never right?
https://t.co/l90P2MU1xd started with one job: tell you which cancer screenings to get.
Today it does so much more. The new extended report still takes 3 minutes, still free, still no signup. You now leave with screenings to do, what to talk to your doctor, and small lifestyle changes that would move the needle.
It's #DressInBlue Day! 💙
Today our staff are wearing blue to raise awareness about colon cancer.
If you're 45 or older, this is your reminder to ask your health care provider about colon cancer screening: https://t.co/HNm9yYzD3j
@nycHealthy Thank you for raising awareness 💙 We turned our entire app blue today in support. For anyone unsure what screenings they need, https://t.co/o31fEJVG02 gives you a personalized plan in about 2 minutes. Happy #DressInBlueDay!