The end of the keyboard? Workers are turning to voice.

Is keyboard writing coming to an end? More and more employees are setting aside taxes and using sound detection tools supported by artificial intelligence.
Instead of the usual keyboard noise, whispering to computers is being heard in some offices. Fenomen is called “voiceping”, a term that refers to the moment when someone realizes that using voice to communicate with technology can change the way it works.
The term was widely used by Reid Hoffman, co-founder of LinkedIn, Manas AI and Inflection AI, who last year described himself as “voicileled”. According to him, serious use of sound to interact with technology opens a new way to increase skills and productivity.
Basically, it's about voice detection as an alternative to keyboard. The idea is simple: People speak much faster than they write, so in theory, they can produce more text in less time.
Voice - making is not new, but previous versions have often been incorrect. They misunderstood words, demanded constant corrections, and for many users ended up taking more time than traditional writing.
The new change is related to artificial intelligence. Modern detection tools, such as Wispp Flow, Aqua Voice, Talk Tastic, Typeless or Superwirer, promise not only to transliterate words but also to organize disordered thoughts into the clearest and most consistent text.
Combined with programming tools or working applications, these platforms can get an idea expressed aloud and turn it into code, email, footnote or more structured documents.
However, the phenomenon is not without problems. If everyone in an office starts talking to their computers, workspaces can quickly become noisy and distracting environments.
According to reports from the Wall Street Journal, several once quiet offices in Silicon Valley are being transformed into mobbing places, while employees detect instructions, ideas, and commands for artificial intelligence.
This may also be why many of these tools relate to the idea of “whispering”. Users often refuse to speak out loud, either out of embarrassment or out of concern.
There is another question: Does it really help to speak faster than writing? For some people, keyboard is not just a means to cast words on the screen. The slower reading of writing helps them organize their thoughts, edit the process, and build clearer sentences.
On the other hand, voice detection advocates say that He can take raw thoughts and process them faster than man. In that sense, voice can become the main way to communicate with computers, while keyboards can be used more for corrections and editings.
At the moment, “vo perceiveing” seems like another sign of how artificial intelligence is changing daily work habits. For some, it may be a step toward greater productivity. For others, just a new source of noise in the office.
If this is really the beginning of the keyboard, it remains to be seen. Clearly, though, the way people write, think, and communicate with technology is entering a new phase.












