Lungoor sits between your thought and your keyboard. Hold a key, talk, and it lands where you need it formatted for the moment.
Voice the raw thought on the walk home. A clean weekly update lands in the investor email by morning.
Speak the takeaways from a 60-minute review and get a tight set of decisions, owners, and dates in Linear-ready form.
Talk through the bug, the suspects, and the constraints. Lungoor structures it for Cursor or Claude with the right file paths and tone.
Brain-dump the post idea, the hook, the three things you actually want to say. A structured draft returns in your voice.
Lungoor is built to disappear into your day. Fewer apps to open, fewer windows to switch, fewer thoughts that get lost on the way to the keyboard.
Double-Shift or Fn pulls Lungoor into whichever app you're in. No window switch. No mouse. No reaching.
Speak as long or as short as you need. Lungoor follows your pacing. No time limits, no awkward beeps, no anxiety.
Output drops into the active surface. Slack draft, email body, code prompt, task list. Already formatted.
Lungoor learns the words, rhythms and sign-offs that read as you. Polished, never generic.
Typing forces structure too early.
Voice feels natural because thinking is rarely linear.
Lungoor reduces the friction between thought and action.
That's the product.
I haven't typed a Slack message in two weeks. My team thinks I've started writing better.
It's the closest thing to a thought-to-text pipeline I've used. The 'pro email' style alone earns its keep.
Lungoor turned my rambling voice note into a client brief that actually got approved first try.
I dictate my morning standup while commuting. By the time I reach office it's already formatted and sent.
The context retention across long voice dumps is what sets it apart. Nothing else comes close.
My investors get polished updates and I never open a doc editor. That's the pitch right there.
I haven't typed a Slack message in two weeks. My team thinks I've started writing better.
It's the closest thing to a thought-to-text pipeline I've used. The 'pro email' style alone earns its keep.
Lungoor turned my rambling voice note into a client brief that actually got approved first try.
I dictate my morning standup while commuting. By the time I reach office it's already formatted and sent.
The context retention across long voice dumps is what sets it apart. Nothing else comes close.
My investors get polished updates and I never open a doc editor. That's the pitch right there.
Whisper transcribes. Lungoor edits. There's a real gap between the two. Lungoor lives in it.
I use it after every client call. Five minutes of voice becomes a clean follow-up email in seconds.
My team of 12 all switched within a week of me showing it. It just removes friction from written communication.
The tone modes are brilliant. Same voice note, three completely different output styles. That's powerful.
I speak Hindi-English mix and it still gets the intent right every time. That's rare.
Lungoor is the only tool where the output sounds like me, not like a robot pretending to be me.
Whisper transcribes. Lungoor edits. There's a real gap between the two. Lungoor lives in it.
I use it after every client call. Five minutes of voice becomes a clean follow-up email in seconds.
My team of 12 all switched within a week of me showing it. It just removes friction from written communication.
The tone modes are brilliant. Same voice note, three completely different output styles. That's powerful.
I speak Hindi-English mix and it still gets the intent right every time. That's rare.
Lungoor is the only tool where the output sounds like me, not like a robot pretending to be me.
Three quiet steps. No app to open, no buttons to find. Just a shortcut, your voice, and the right thing landing in the right place.
Trigger from any app with Double-Shift or Fn. Ramble, backtrack, change your mind.
Lungoor figures out audience, format, and what you actually meant. Your phrasing, kept.
Slack draft, email body, code prompt, task list. Already formatted, already in your voice.