Hands-free prototyping for inventors of every ability
Describe a circuit, robot, or gadget out loud. VoiceForge turns your voice into a labeled wiring diagram, a real parts list, and ready-to-flash Arduino or Raspberry Pi code — then reads the rationale back to you. No typing. No schematic software. No keyboard.
Who hands-free prototyping is for
Inventors with mobility or vision differences
Build real hardware without typing, mousing, or reading schematics. Every diagram, BOM, and code block can be read aloud.
Makers who think out loud
Talk through the idea and watch the spec form in real time. Iterate by speaking changes — 'swap the servo for a stepper, add an encoder.'
Educators & accessibility labs
Run shop and lab classes where every student can design, prototype, and ship — regardless of how they interact with a computer.
How hands-free works
Speak it
Hold the mic and describe what you want to build, in plain language.
Forge it
VoiceForge returns a labeled wiring diagram, a real BOM with part numbers, and flash-ready firmware.
Hear it back
Tap read-aloud on any step and the rationale is narrated out loud — so you can verify the design eyes-free.
What you walk away with
A labeled wiring diagram
Every pin, rail, and component named. Read aloud on demand.
A real parts list
Orderable part numbers — not vague 'a motor and some wires.'
Flash-ready firmware
Arduino C++ or Python for Raspberry Pi, commented and explainable.
A narrated rationale
Why each part is in the design — spoken aloud, not just printed.
Hands-free prototyping FAQ
+What is hands-free prototyping?
Hands-free prototyping is designing real hardware — circuits, robots, gadgets — entirely by voice. You describe what you want out loud and VoiceForge returns a labeled wiring diagram, parts list, and ready-to-flash Arduino or Raspberry Pi firmware. No typing, no schematic software, no keyboard required.
+Who is hands-free prototyping for?
Inventors with mobility or vision differences who can't comfortably type or read schematics, makers who think out loud and want to move fast, and educators in shop, lab, or accessibility-first classrooms.
+What hardware does it support?
Arduino (Uno, Nano, ESP32, etc.) and Raspberry Pi by default, plus the common sensors, motors, drivers, and modules that pair with them. The generated BOM uses real part numbers you can order.
+Do I need to know how to code?
No. VoiceForge writes the firmware for you and reads its rationale back out loud so you understand what each section does. You can flash the code as-is or edit it later if you want.