AICHE vs Wispr Flow

9 platforms, real API, $3.99/mo annual. Or four platforms, gated API, $12/mo annual.

Same idea (hotkey, speak, clean text). Different footprint, different price, different team story.

Download AICHE
Works on
macOSWindowsLinuxiOSiPadApple WatchAndroidChromeObsidianREST API

Short answer: AICHE and Wispr Flow do the same job (hotkey, speak, get clean text in any app), but AICHE runs on 9 platforms - macOS, Windows, Linux, iPhone, iPad, Apple Watch, Android, Chrome extension, and Obsidian plugin - with public REST API access, starting at $3.99/mo billed annually. Wispr Flow runs on four (macOS, Windows, iPhone, Android), starts at $12/mo on the paid tier, and gates its API behind enterprise sales. If you're on Mac only and want the most-polished name in the category, Wispr Flow is the safe pick. If you live on Linux, an iPad, an Apple Watch, in Obsidian, or want to call dictation from your own scripts, AICHE is the only one of the two that gets you there.

What Wispr Flow is selling

Wispr Flow's homepage pitch is "the voice-to-text AI that turns speech into clear, polished writing in every app," with the supporting line "Don't type, just speak." The product is a desktop and mobile dictation layer with AI cleanup, marketed as the default premium choice in the category. A banner across the top of wisprflow.ai reads "Wispr raises 81M to build the Voice OS," which positions Flow as the first surface of a larger platform play rather than a single dictation app.

The features they lead with are AI Auto Edits (filler removal, grammar, punctuation, paragraphing in real time), Command Mode (voice-driven editing commands, Pro only), a Personal Dictionary plus Snippets (custom vocabulary plus voice-triggered text expansion), 100+ language support with mid-sentence code-switching, and a "Tones per app" Personalized Style setting that adjusts formality based on which app you're dictating into. Privacy is framed around a togglable Privacy Mode / Zero Data Retention, which is opt-in on individual tiers and enforced on Enterprise.

Independent reviews call the writing quality the strongest part of the product. Wispr's AI cleanup is widely praised for preserving the user's voice rather than over-editing, and the Mac build is consistently described as the most polished surface. On the enterprise side the public posture is SOC 2 Type II, ISO 27001, HIPAA-eligible across plans with a Business Associate Agreement, and SSO/SAML on Enterprise. One caveat worth surfacing for anyone procuring against those artifacts in May 2026: their previous compliance vendor Delve was removed from Y Combinator in April 2026 amid widely-reported allegations of templated audit reports, and Wispr Flow has publicly named themselves among the affected customers, contracted A-LIGN as a new auditor and Drata as a new compliance platform, and stated the fresh audit is not yet complete (see their own note on our compliance program). The certifications still on display, in other words, are mid-re-audit. Their statement on remediation is the most authoritative source for the current state.

The feature comparison

This is the at-a-glance table. Everything in it is sourced from AICHE's product config and the Wispr Flow help center / pricing page as of May 2026.

Axis AICHE Wispr Flow
macOS Yes (universal, hotkey) Yes (macOS 12+)
Windows Yes (x64, hotkey) Yes (Win 10/11 x64)
Linux Yes (.deb, .rpm, AppImage, Flatpak) No (explicitly unsupported)
iPhone Yes (iOS 15+) Yes (iOS 18.3+)
iPad Yes (native iPad layout) No (explicitly unsupported)
Apple Watch Yes (record from wrist, no length cap) No
Android Yes (phone + tablet, home-screen widget) Yes (phones; tablets "not optimized")
Chrome extension Yes (inserts into web text fields) No
Obsidian plugin Yes (Community Plugins) No
Platforms 9 + API 4
Free tier 7-day free trial of Pro, no credit card Free Basic: 2,000 words/week (Mac/Win), 1,000/wk (iPhone)
Paid entry tier Personal: $3.99/mo annual ($4.99 monthly) Flow Pro: $12/mo annual ($15 monthly)
Higher paid tier Pro: $8.33/mo annual ($9.99 monthly) Same Pro tier ($12-$15)
Team / admin plan Pro tier includes seats, roles, unified billing Enterprise only ("Contact sales")
API access Public REST API on Pro tier (self-serve) Enterprise-gated ("exclusive access," contact enterprise@wisprflow.ai)
Custom vocabulary 50 entries, synced across all platforms Personal Dictionary (no published cap)
Code / dev profile Software Development profile (Pro): tuned for code identifiers, CLI flags, library names "Syntax-smart dictation" marketing in dev landing; no tier-level toggle
Voice for AI coding agents Voice Code (Pro): pause-aware auto-send into Claude Code, Codex, Cursor, Antigravity; voice approvals for agent actions Generic dictation into Cursor / VS Code; no structured agent loop
Transcription languages 99 100
UI languages Mobile: 28. Desktop / Chrome / Obsidian: English only Not specified per platform
Auto-translate to English Yes, every platform Not advertised as a primary feature
Cold start to recording Sub-100ms Not published
Transcription speed ~3 seconds for 15 minutes of audio Not published
Audio retention within 1 second after processing (purged after processing), default for everyone Default: may be used to improve product unless Privacy Mode is on (opt-in on individual tiers, enforced Enterprise)
End-to-end encrypted sync Yes (AES-256-GCM, Argon2id, user-set passphrase) Cross-device sync of dictionary / snippets; E2EE not advertised
Compliance certifications None published SOC 2 Type II + ISO 27001 (Enterprise), HIPAA BAA available - certificates issued by Delve, currently in re-audit with A-LIGN / Drata after the Delve scandal (April 2026, see their public note)
Offline / local processing Cloud processing (named provider: Groq), with local encrypted queue for capture during connectivity drops; queue auto-resumes when connection returns Cloud-only, no offline path at any tier (no local queue)
Privacy posture (one neutral line) Cloud processing via named provider (Groq), audio retention within 1 second after processing, opt-in E2EE for sync, no automatic desktop telemetry Cloud-only by their own statement; Privacy Mode opt-in; an April 2026 HN thread describes active-window / URL / periodic-screenshot capture for context-aware formatting

Where Wispr Flow wins

This is the section where the writer doesn't pretend the competitor has no advantages. Wispr Flow has real ones.

Brand recognition. Wispr Flow is the category's anchor name in 2026. They're the product most "best dictation app" roundups benchmark against, and the "Wispr Flow alternatives" search query exists precisely because they're the default. If you want the most-talked-about product, they have that.

Polished Mac UX. Reviewers consistently call the Mac build the most refined surface in the category. The cleanup that ships with their AI Auto Edits is praised for preserving the user's voice without over-editing. If you live entirely on macOS and you care about that final 10% of polish more than anything else, that's real.

Enterprise procurement surface. Wispr Flow publishes a SOC 2 Type II + ISO 27001 + HIPAA BAA + SSO/SAML procurement page on Enterprise, and AICHE doesn't carry those artifacts. That said, the certifications currently on display were issued by Delve, the YC-backed compliance vendor that was removed from Y Combinator in April 2026 amid widely-reported allegations that hundreds of audit reports were templated boilerplate generated before client evidence was reviewed. Wispr Flow has publicly acknowledged being one of Delve's customers, switched to A-LIGN as a new auditor and Drata as a new compliance platform, and stated the fresh audit is not yet complete (their own note on the compliance program is the most current source). Anyone procuring on the basis of those certifications in May 2026 should read their statement and decide whether a mid-re-audit posture meets their requirements; that's a judgment call for the procurement team, not the marketing page.

Persona landing pages. Wispr ships dedicated pages for lawyers, healthcare, government, engineers, consultants, sales, customer support. That's useful for procurement and outbound buying. AICHE has comparison and integration pages but not that persona-by-persona shelf.

If those four points describe your situation, Wispr Flow is a reasonable buy. The rest of this article is about the cases where they aren't.

Where AICHE wins

Walked one beat at a time. Each one is backed by something concrete from the product or the pricing config, not adjectives.

1. Platform coverage

Wispr Flow runs on four surfaces: macOS, Windows, iPhone, Android. Their own help-center page on supported devices is explicit: "iPad, Linux, Chromebooks, and virtual machines or remote desktop environments are not supported." That's not a future-roadmap line. It's the current matrix.

AICHE runs on ten:

  • macOS (universal, global hotkey ⌃+⌥+R)
  • Windows (x64, global hotkey Ctrl+Alt+R)
  • Linux - engineered across distro families: .deb (Debian / Ubuntu / Mint), .rpm (Fedora / RHEL / Rocky), AppImage (any glibc distro), Flatpak (Flathub-ready, sandboxed). Hotkey Ctrl+Alt+R.
  • iPhone (iOS 15+)
  • iPad (native tablet layout)
  • Apple Watch (record from your wrist, no length cap)
  • Android (phone + tablet, home-screen quick-record widget)
  • Chrome extension (voice into any web text field)
  • Obsidian plugin (Community Plugins listing)
  • REST API (Pro tier, programmatic dictation from your own code)

The Linux story is worth a separate note. Shipping four package formats covers Debian-based, Red Hat-based, sandboxed, and unrestricted-glibc distros. Most competitors that say "we support Linux" drop a single AppImage and call it done; the rest don't ship Linux at all. AICHE is the only mainstream voice-typing layer in 2026 that an engineering team can deploy across a Linux fleet without per-distro workarounds.

If you switch between a Mac at home, a Linux box at work, an iPad on the couch, and an Android phone on the bus, Wispr Flow gives you the Mac and the phone. AICHE gives you all four. The headline isn't "more checkboxes". The headline is whether your voice layer goes where your day goes. For a meaningful slice of users (Linux developers, iPad-first writers, anyone who edits inside Obsidian) Wispr Flow simply isn't an option.

1b. The organizational angle: mixed-OS teams + work-plus-personal use

Companies almost never run a single operating system. Office staff on Windows. Executives on macOS. Engineering / DevOps / SRE / data teams on Linux. Field staff on iOS and Android. A voice-typing layer that only ships on Mac + Windows + maybe one mobile platform forces a procurement compromise: someone in the organization gets excluded.

AICHE covers the whole stack with one product, one subscription model, one cleanup quality. The team buying it doesn't have to draft a memo explaining why the Linux-based infra team has to use a different tool.

The same logic applies to the work / personal split for individuals. AICHE's Personal tier covers 3 devices and Pro covers 10, with no "work license vs personal license" distinction. If your work laptop is a ThinkPad on Ubuntu and your personal machine is a MacBook, one subscription works on both. Cloud sync is opt-in - if you want notes to flow across, turn it on; if you'd rather keep work and personal separate, leave sync off and the apps still work fully on each device. Wispr Flow has no Linux build at all, so the same "use it everywhere you actually work" pattern only spans Mac / Windows / iPhone / Android, and only if those happen to be the devices you use.

2. API and integrations

Wispr Flow's API documentation page is titled "exclusive access." To use it, an organization has to be approved by Wispr's team and email enterprise@wisprflow.ai. That's not a product tier. That's a sales gate.

AICHE ships a public REST API on the Pro tier ($8.33/mo annual). You buy Pro, you get an API key, you call the endpoint from your own script. No enterprise contact form, no approval process. The same Pro tier also includes the Chrome extension, the Obsidian plugin, and Voice Code for AI agents (pause-aware auto-send into Claude Code, Codex, Cursor, Antigravity, plus voice confirmations for agent actions).

For anyone who actually wants to embed dictation into a custom workflow, this is the difference between "buy and integrate" and "ask permission, wait for sales."

3. Teams

Wispr Flow's team-management features (SSO/SAML, admin seats, usage dashboards) are listed only on the Enterprise tier, which is "Contact sales." There's no self-serve team plan in their published pricing.

AICHE's Pro tier is the team plan. It includes team management, seats, roles, and unified billing. You set up a team in the dashboard, invite seats, pay one bill. The configuration that other vendors put behind a sales call is a checkbox in your account.

If you're a five-person engineering team or a ten-person consultancy that wants the people on it to dictate without each one running a separate credit card through their personal app store, AICHE Pro is what you want. Wispr Flow's equivalent is a quote from a salesperson.

4. Software-dev fit

Wispr Flow advertises "syntax-smart dictation" on its developer landing page, but there's no tier-level toggle for it. You get whatever cleanup their default model decides to do.

AICHE Pro ships a Software Development profile: a recognition mode tuned specifically for code identifiers, CLI flags, library names, and developer jargon. You turn it on once. Dictating useEffect, --no-verify, kebab-case-flag, snake_case_var, redis.set, or pnpm dlx works the way you'd expect. Smart quotes can be disabled in settings so that pasted commands don't break a shell.

Combined with the 50-entry custom vocabulary (synced across every AICHE platform), this means a developer who lives in Cursor or Claude Code can speak full architectural prompts with real identifiers and get back text that doesn't need editing before it goes into the agent. The Voice Code mode (pause-aware auto-send) was built specifically for that loop.

5. Pricing

Annual, monthly equivalents, lowest-to-highest:

Tier AICHE Wispr Flow
Free 7-day Pro trial, no card 2,000 words/week (Basic)
Entry paid (annual) $3.99/mo (Personal) $12/mo (Pro)
Entry paid (monthly) $4.99/mo (Personal) $15/mo (Pro)
Higher paid (annual) $8.33/mo (Pro) $12/mo (Pro, same tier)
Team plan Included in Pro Enterprise only (custom quote)

AICHE Personal annual is roughly 3x cheaper than Wispr Flow Pro annual. AICHE Pro annual is ~30% cheaper than Wispr Flow Pro annual and includes the public API, the team plan, the dev profile, and Voice Code. Independent reviews in 2026 have raised pricing as a sticking point: efficient.app calls it "the priciest at $15/mo, cloud-only with no offline mode," Spokenly's review calls it "the most expensive option in the category," and Voibe's pricing analysis puts three years of Wispr Flow Pro at $432 against a $149 one-time lifetime alternative on Mac.

The free-tier comparison is also worth flagging. Wispr Flow's Basic tier caps at 2,000 words/week on Mac and Windows (1,000/week on iPhone). At speaking speed (~150 WPM), that's about 13 minutes of dictation per week. Reviews describe it as a teaser rather than a usable plan. AICHE's free model is different: a 7-day trial of the full Pro tier, no credit card required, with no word cap during the trial. After day 7 you're on a paid plan or you're not on the product.

See the full pricing page for the exact current numbers.

6. Speed and quality (with published numbers)

Numbers AICHE publishes, sourced from the product spec:

  • Cold start to recording: sub-100ms (audio prewarm)
  • Transcription speed: ~3 seconds for 15 minutes of audio
  • Audio retention: within 1 second after processing, typically 2-3 seconds during processing
  • Encryption at rest (cloud sync): AES-256-GCM with Argon2id key derivation, user-set passphrase
  • Encryption in transit: modern TLS, with certificate pinning on iOS and Android
  • Transcription languages: 99
  • Mobile UI localization: 28 languages

Wispr Flow does not publish equivalent benchmarks. Independent reviews in 2026 surface assorted resource-usage and reliability observations about the Windows build, and Wispr Flow currently carries a 2.7 / 5 "Poor" rating on Trustpilot (as of May 2026), with the gap between that and curated review-site ratings widely discussed in the category press. None of those are AICHE's claims to make - they're in the public review record - but they suggest the "polished" reputation isn't uniform across surfaces.

On the language axis, AICHE supports 99 input languages, Wispr Flow advertises 100. Practically the same coverage. Both products use OpenAI Whisper at the engine level, so the underlying transcription language set is roughly identical regardless of which marketing-page number is higher. AICHE's auto-translation feature works on every platform - you can speak in any of the supported languages and ship clean English output. One thing to keep straight: AICHE's UI is localized to 28 languages on mobile only. The desktop apps, Chrome extension, and Obsidian plugin have English menus. Voice input works in all 99 languages everywhere though, so a Russian-speaking Linux developer gets Russian transcription even with English menus.

7. Never lose a recording (capture reliability)

Wispr Flow is cloud-only at every tier and processes recordings in real time. Independent reviews call this out plainly: "cloud-only with no offline mode" (efficient.app), and the Trustpilot review record surfaces recurring reliability complaints. For any real-time-cloud-only architecture, a network drop, a server error, or a crash mid-recording can mean the recording doesn't survive - that's a general property of the category, not a finding against any one vendor.

AICHE's architecture treats this as a class of bug to eliminate, not an edge case. Press the hotkey on a plane, in the subway, in a basement - the recording is saved locally, encrypted on disk (AES-256 via OS-native secure storage), and dropped into a queue. The moment connectivity returns, the queue processes automatically (or on manual trigger if you prefer). A network drop mid-recording, an app crash, a server error during processing, even a subscription lapse - the recording survives all of them and finishes when conditions allow. The hotkey, the workflow, and the output are the same online or offline.

This isn't a checkbox; it's an architectural choice. Real-time-cloud-only products can't make this promise because they don't have the queue. If you've been burned by a voice app dropping a long recording, this is the difference that actually matters.

On privacy (one compact section)

Wispr Flow's own privacy page (verified May 2026) states that "transcription always happens in the cloud" and does not name the third-party processors involved. Audio and transcript data may be used to improve the product and its AI models by default, unless Privacy Mode is turned on. Privacy Mode is opt-in on individual tiers and enforced for Enterprise.

A few architectural choices in their product are worth understanding before adoption. A widely-discussed April 2026 Hacker News thread ("Wispr Flow Is Tracking Every App/URL You Visit and Taking Screenshots") describes the product capturing the name of the active application and URL alongside periodic screenshots for "context-aware" formatting, and transmitting that material to their cloud pipeline. The same pattern is described in independent reviews from earlier in 2026, including Voibe's safety review and a VocAI privacy analysis. None of this is hidden in their product; it's how the cleanup is positioned. Whether it matters depends on what you have open while you dictate - for legal, healthcare, government, and any other privileged-information workflows, on-screen material accompanying the audio stream is a question your compliance team should answer, not your marketing page.

A useful frame for anyone comparing voice apps on privacy generally:

  • A walkie-talkie button is different from an always-on security camera. AICHE records only during your explicit press-toggle. Some products in this category run continuous listening or monitoring threads that exist outside the recording window.
  • A doorbell is different from a front-door listener. AICHE doesn't install global keystroke hooks. Some products do, which means typed material outside the dictation moment can flow into the same telemetry pipeline.
  • One named provider is different from three unnamed providers. AICHE names Groq as the transcription provider with under-30-second audio retention. Some products in the category route content through multiple third-party LLMs without naming them.
  • Per-user keys are different from one master key for everyone. AICHE issues per-user authentication for any cloud-side storage. Architecturally, shared hardcoded credentials at the application layer create the kind of breach blast-radius that scales linearly with your user count.
  • The active window is different from the title of the active window plus a screenshot of it. Sending the name of whatever you're looking at along with the audio is a deliberate design choice; reasonable for some products' marketing claims, less so for others'.

AICHE's posture, stated plainly:

  • Audio is streamed to a named cloud provider (Groq), processed, and discarded immediately after processing, within 1 second. No persistent audio storage.
  • Transcript storage is local on your device by default. Cloud sync is opt-in.
  • Cloud sync, when on, is end-to-end encrypted (AES-256-GCM with Argon2id key derivation from a passphrase you set). We can't read synced notes on our servers.
  • The microphone is active only during explicit recording. There's no background recording, no global keystroke logging, no clipboard monitoring outside explicit user action, no active-window title or URL transmission, no periodic screenshots.
  • On desktop, no automatic telemetry leaves your machine. There is no analytics SDK shipping usage or behavioral data in the background. The only diagnostic surface is user-initiated: either you accept the OS-level "share with developer" prompt that macOS / Windows surface after a crash, or you click a "Send Diagnostic Report" button yourself. Nothing in between.
  • On mobile, the third-party telemetry surface is Firebase for ad attribution. That's it across the entire product line.
  • The marketing site loads one analytics provider, named in the privacy policy. No fingerprinting libraries, no de-anonymization scripts, no session-replay tools.

Both products are cloud transcribers, so the underlying audio path leaves the device in both cases. The questions worth asking of any voice app you're evaluating are: who names their third-party processors, what their default retention is (versus an opt-in toggle), what they capture outside of the explicit recording window, what telemetry their own marketing site loads when you visit it, and whether their team plan and current compliance posture match your procurement requirements.

Common questions

Q: I'm on Linux. Which one works for me?
A: AICHE. Wispr Flow's help center is explicit that Linux is not supported. AICHE ships native Linux builds as .deb, .rpm, AppImage, and Flatpak, with the same global hotkey (Ctrl+Alt+R) and the same Software Development profile as the Mac and Windows builds.

Q: I dictate into Cursor and Claude Code. Which one handles snake_case and CLI flags?
A: AICHE's Pro tier has the Software Development profile (recognition tuned for code identifiers, CLI flags, library names) and Voice Code mode (pause-aware auto-send into agent input). Wispr Flow markets "syntax-smart dictation" on its developer landing but doesn't expose a tier-level toggle for it. If your day involves dictating useEffect, --no-verify, or pnpm dlx, AICHE was built for that workflow.

Q: I'm in a regulated industry (healthcare, legal, government). Which one has the compliance shelf?
A: Wispr Flow publishes SOC 2 Type II + ISO 27001 + HIPAA BAA on Enterprise; AICHE doesn't carry those artifacts. The caveat for May 2026 procurement: those certifications were issued by Delve, the compliance vendor that was removed from Y Combinator in April 2026, and Wispr Flow has publicly stated the re-audit (now with A-LIGN as auditor and Drata as platform) is not yet complete. Their own note on the compliance program is the right source for the current state. If your compliance team requires a current, completed BAA today, ask both vendors directly about timing. AICHE's posture (zero-retention audio, opt-in E2EE sync, named cloud provider, no global keystroke logging, no active-window or screenshot transmission) is honest and well-documented, but it's a different artifact than a signed BAA.

Q: I want to call dictation from my own scripts. Which one has an API?
A: AICHE. The REST API is included on the Pro tier ($8.33/mo annual) with self-serve access. Wispr Flow's API is described as "exclusive access" on their docs, requiring approval from their enterprise team via email. If you're a solo developer or a small team that wants to wire dictation into a custom workflow without a sales process, AICHE Pro is the way to do that today.

Q: I have an iPad as my main writing device.
A: AICHE. Wispr Flow's help center lists iPad as explicitly unsupported. AICHE ships a native iPad app with a full tablet layout, and the same E2EE sync that ties together your iPhone, Apple Watch, Android, Mac, Windows, and Linux installs.

Q: I want the cheapest option that does the basics well.
A: AICHE Personal is $3.99/mo on annual (about a third of Wispr Flow Pro's $12/mo annual) and includes unlimited voice notes, AI cleanup, custom vocabulary, mobile + desktop + Chrome + Obsidian, multilingual voice input, and auto-translation to English. The Software Development profile, Voice Code for agents, and the REST API are on the Pro tier ($8.33/mo annual), which is still cheaper than Wispr Flow Pro and includes the team plan.

Q: I'm a five-person team. Where does each product land?
A: AICHE Pro is the self-serve team plan: seats, roles, unified billing in your dashboard. Wispr Flow gates team management behind Enterprise sales. If you want to invite four colleagues today, AICHE is one purchase. Wispr Flow is a quote.

A few honest tradeoffs (the AICHE side)

Articles that pretend their own product has no limitations read as marketing. AICHE's limitations, where they're relevant to this comparison:

  • AICHE's desktop transcription requires an internet connection - processing happens cloud-side. AICHE does ship a local encrypted queue for capture moments when connectivity drops (the recording is saved locally, encrypted on disk, and the queue processes automatically when the connection returns), so a lost connection doesn't mean a lost recording. But that's a capture safety net, not a "100% on-device" mode. Wispr Flow is cloud-only with no equivalent offline queue per independent reviews ("cloud-only with no offline mode" - efficient.app).
  • AICHE's mobile model is capture-first (record a memo, the app processes it) rather than inline keyboard dictation as you type. If you want iPhone-keyboard-style inline dictation, that's not what AICHE ships.
  • AICHE's desktop UI is English-only. The 18-language localization is mobile-only. Voice input works in 99 languages on every platform regardless.
  • AICHE doesn't currently carry SOC 2 Type II, ISO 27001, or a HIPAA BAA. If your procurement specifically requires those artifacts, neither vendor has a clean current-state answer in May 2026 (AICHE hasn't pursued them; Wispr Flow's existing ones are mid-re-audit per the Delve situation), so the question worth asking is what timeline either vendor commits to.

Result

If your day fits inside macOS + iPhone + maybe Android, you don't need an API, you don't need a team plan that's not "contact sales," and you want the name-brand polish in the category, Wispr Flow is a reasonable product. The cleanup quality is widely praised and the Mac build is the most refined surface in the segment.

If your day touches Linux, iPad, Apple Watch, Chrome, Obsidian, or your own scripts, or you want a real team plan, or you'd rather not pay $12-$15/mo for dictation, or you're a developer who needs a recognition profile tuned for code identifiers and CLI flags, AICHE is the only one of these two that gets you all of that. 9 platforms, public REST API on the Pro tier, self-serve team plan, Software Development profile, from $3.99/mo billed annually.

Try it now: open AICHE, press ⌃+⌥+R on Mac or Ctrl+Alt+R on Windows / Linux, speak the longest prompt you've been avoiding because typing it felt like too much keyboard time, and watch the cleaned text land at your cursor. The 7-day Pro trial is no credit card required. See pricing.

Tags

productivityworkflowai-codingdevelopment