Voice-first prototyping for hardware
Voice-first prototyping means your voice is the primary tool — not a mouse, a CAD app, or a 200-tab schematic editor. You speak what you want to build, and the design surface keeps up with you.
Why voice-first prototyping
Most hardware tools assume you already know the parts, the pin numbers, and the wiring topology. Voice-first prototyping inverts that: you describe the behavior you want — "a planter that lights up red when the soil is dry" — and the tool fills in the engineering. Speech is faster than typing, more expressive than menus, and accessible to makers who can't or don't want to wrestle with traditional EDA software.
How VoiceForge does it
VoiceForge is a voice-first prototyping studio built around three steps. First, real-time speech-to-text captures your description. Second, a physics- and electronics-aware model drafts a labeled wiring diagram, a real bill of materials, and a 3D parts layout. Third, you get ready-to-flash Arduino or MicroPython firmware with pin assignments and a test sequence.
Every step stays voice-first. You can talk over the draft to iterate — "swap the servo for a stepper" or "add a battery option" — and the spec updates in place. The whole loop is designed so a sighted maker, a blind maker, or someone prototyping hands-free at a workbench can all use the same tool.
Who voice-first prototyping is for
- Makers who think out loud and want a tool that listens.
- Educators teaching electronics without front-loading a CAD curriculum.
- Accessibility-first inventors who need a hands-free, audio-first design loop.
- Engineers prototyping fast — turning a hallway conversation into a buildable spec before lunch.
Try voice-first prototyping
Your first invention is free. Open the studio, press the mic, and describe something you want to build. See real examples of what other makers have shipped, or read how it works end to end.
Start voice-first prototyping
Free first invention. $5/mo for unlimited.