Aqua Voice vs Ghost Pepper
Aqua Voice has been my daily driver for dictation for about a year, and it's the rare subscription that earns its keep. Eight dollars a month, fast, and genuinely accurate. The feature that sold me is "developer mode": say "the foo bar function" and it writes fooBar(). Say "tilde slash dev slash foo" and it writes ~/foo. Built-in macOS and iOS dictation feels embarrassing by comparison.


68,188 words through it so far. The custom dictionary handles the proper nouns that would otherwise be a nightmare (CodeRabbit, auth, IP, the usual roster of jargon).
The one thing I don't love
Audio leaves my machine. How long is it kept? Where is it stored? The product keeps a history, and I don't want a history. Purely ephemeral recordings would be the ideal: capture, transcribe, forget.
A local-first contender
Ghost Pepper just landed on my radar. 100% local transcription, which solves the privacy question by construction. I haven't tried it yet, but it's next on the list.
The barrier to building this kind of tool is lower than it's ever been. Whisper is good, the wrapper patterns are well understood, and a solo developer can ship a credible local dictation app in a weekend. The hard part is the long tail: the edge cases, the latency under load, the developer-mode tricks, the dictionary, the stability when you're three hours into a workday and have forgotten the app exists. That long tail is what $8/month buys you. We'll see if Ghost Pepper closes the gap.
Sketched by a human, rewritten with AI / claude-opus-4-7