Original Reddit post

One thing I’ve been noticing while building AI tools is how unnatural typing prompts actually feels. Most people think faster than they type, yet almost every AI interface still revolves around the keyboard. We moved from command lines → search boxes → chat prompts, but the input method hasn’t really changed. I’m currently building a voice-first AI tool where you just speak naturally and it turns that into structured text (emails, notes, prompts, etc.). While testing it myself, I noticed something interesting: when speaking instead of typing, the interaction feels much closer to how people actually think. It raises a bigger question: Is typing just a temporary interface for AI? Historically interfaces evolve toward more natural input: punch cards → keyboards keyboards → touch touch → voice? Curious what people here think: • Will voice become the default interface for AI systems? • Or are keyboards still the most efficient for structured thinking? submitted by /u/Vanilla-Green

Originally posted by u/Vanilla-Green on r/ArtificialInteligence