Handy – free open source speech-to-text app

(github.com)

52 points | by tin7in 3 hours ago

13 comments

  • blutoot 13 minutes ago
    I have dystonia which often stiffens my arms in a way that makes it impossible for me to type on a keyboard. TTS apps like SuperWhisper have proven to be very helpful for me in such situations. I am hoping to get a similar experience out of "Handy" (very apt maming from my perspective).

    I do, however, wonder if there is a way all these TTS tools can get to the next level. The generated text should not be just a verbatim copy of what I just said, but depending on the context, it should elaborate. For example, if my cursor is actively inside an editor/IDE with some code, my coding-related verbal prompts should actually generate the right/desired code in that IDE.

    Perhaps this is a bit of combining TTS with computer-use.

  • llarsson 31 minutes ago
    A question because I'm not using speech-to-text, but find it intriguing (especially since it's now possible to do locally and for free).

    How have your computing habits changed as a result of having this? When do you typically use this instead of typing on the keyboard?

    • tin7in 28 minutes ago
      I use it all the time with coding agents, especially if I'm running multiple terminals. It's way faster to talk than type. The only problem is that it looks awkward if there are others around.
      • johnisgood 23 minutes ago
        Interesting. I can think and type faster, but not talk. I am not much of a talker.
    • noneofyour 19 minutes ago
      Part of my job is to give feedback to people using Word Comments. Using STT, it's been a breeze. The time saving really is great. Thing is, I only do this when working at home with no one around. So really only when WFH.
  • PhilippGille 37 minutes ago
    Has anyone compared this with https://github.com/HeroTools/open-whispr already? From the description they seem very similar.

    Handy first release was June 2025, OpenWhispr a month later. Handy has ~11k GitHub stars, OpenWhispr has ~730.

  • frankdilo 1 hour ago
    This looks great! What’s missing for me to switch from something like Wispr Flow is the ability to provide a dictionary for commonly mistaken words (name of your company, people, code libraries).
    • sipjca 8 minutes ago
      There’s a PR for this which will be pulled in soon enough, I can kick off a build of the PR if you want to download a pre release version
    • tin7in 1 hour ago
      It has something called "Custom Words" which might be what you are describing. Haven't tested this feature yet properly.
    • jauntywundrkind 1 hour ago
      I dig that some models have an ability to say how sure they are of words. Manually entering a bunch of special words is ok, but I want to be able to review the output and see what words the model was less sure of, so I can go find out what I might need to add.
  • dumbmrblah 36 minutes ago
    I just set this up today. I had Whispering app set up on my Windows computer, but it really wasn't working well on my Ubuntu computer that I just set up. I found Handy randomly. It was the last app I needed to go Linux full-time. Thank you!
  • mrroryflint 18 minutes ago
    On a M4 Macbook Air, there was enough lag to make it unusable for me. I hit the shortcut and start speaking but there was always a 1-2sec delay before it would actually start transcribing even if the icon was displayed.
    • jborichevskiy 15 minutes ago
      Curious if you were using AirPods or other Bluetooth headphones for this?

      If so, there should be "keep microphone on" or similar setting in the config that may help with this, alternatively, I set my microphone to my MacBook mic so that my headphones aren't involved at all and there is much less latency on activation

    • sipjca 13 minutes ago
      What microphone are you using?
  • Jack5500 1 hour ago
    The Parakeet V3 model is really great!
  • vladstudio 56 minutes ago
    Use it daily. Looks and works great.
  • chainmail2029 54 minutes ago
    There's a slightly awkward naming overlap with an existing product.
    • unwind 40 minutes ago
      Which one? I did a quick search but that didn't turn up anything so perhaps it's a partial word overlap or something.

      I did find the projects "user-facing" home page [1] which was nice. I found it rather hard to find a link from that to the code on GitHub, which was surprising.

      [1]: https://handy.computer/

      • DomB 33 minutes ago
        It's the German word for smart phone / mobile phone
      • zavec 15 minutes ago
        There's also a sex toy
      • sReinwald 15 minutes ago
        [dead]
    • ensocode 38 minutes ago
      This is a slightly German-centric comment.
    • xfeeefeee 21 minutes ago
      [dead]
  • Dnguyen 27 minutes ago
    Would be nice if the output can be piped directly into Claude Code.
  • jborichevskiy 1 hour ago
    Big Handy fan!
  • blutoot 29 minutes ago
    Crashes on Tahoe 26.3 Betq 1 :(
    • sipjca 15 minutes ago
      Please send me a crash log!
  • dotancohen 1 hour ago
    Looks interesting. Why does it need a GUI at all?
    • sipjca 7 minutes ago
      It doesn’t! Just makes it more accessible to more people I feel. There’s a cli version for Mac which I wrote first handy-cli
    • tin7in 1 hour ago
      As an alternative to Wisprflow, Superwhisper and so on. It works really well compared to the commercial competitors but with a local model.
    • unwind 44 minutes ago
      Ah, that was a typo: you meant "GPU" (Graphics Processing Unit, not "GUI" which of course is Graphical User Interface) since that is listed in the system requirements. Explained implicitly by an existing comment, thanks!
    • Barbing 1 hour ago
      I hear a CLI request? Tons of CLI speech-to-text tools by the way, really glad to see this. Excellent competitors (Superwhisper, MacWhisper, etc.) are closed/paid.
    • satvikpendem 58 minutes ago
      Because local AI models run well on a GPU, better than on a CPU
    • kristianp 1 hour ago
      So more people can use it?