Press ⌥⌘V on your Mac. Speak in 中文 / English / العربية. Your text appears, no retyping.
VoxKeyboard runs on the VoxSign platform — memory and identity stay on your devices. Built for GCC's Logistics & Delivery vertical, with a constitution your admin can read.
The keyboard is one hundred and fifty years old. The cloud leaked your data last quarter. Apple Silicon now runs a 7-billion parameter model on battery. The OS layer for voice opens exactly once.
Knowledge work is three times faster when spoken. But dictation alone is not enough — the system must act, not merely transcribe.
Every cloud assistant trains on your prompts. Every enterprise contract in the GCC dies on data residency. We solve it by never sending data in the first place.
The M-series Neural Engine runs Whisper plus a 7B chat model in real time, on battery. The local-first agent is no longer a research toy.
Most assistants give you one input box. VoxSign separates the moments — what you do at the cursor, what you do over coffee, what you review at night. Each mode trains the same memory.
Speak directly into the focused field. Cursor-aware. "Type this" lands on the cursor.
Long-form conversation with on-device memory and optional Claude. Source-cited.
Voice journal with sentiment and tags. Goes nowhere by default — yours alone.
Rehearse pronunciation, presentations, language drills. Real-time scoring.
End-of-day timeline plus NorthStar score. The device tells you what it learned about you.
Most agents ship a "yes, do everything" default and a buried opt-out. We ship the opposite. High-risk operations require Face ID plus a voice phrase, every time. The rule cannot be disabled — not by you, not by an admin.
Six dimensions, updated locally as you use VoxSign. Vocabulary, identity, memory, consistency, accuracy, breadth. You can see why it moved. You can reset it. It is never synced.
Personal use is free, forever. Pro adds longer memory and Claude bridging. Team is what GCC IT departments deploy — constitution-locked, audit-ready, Arabic-native.
Three documents to read before you deploy. The constitution is open source. The threat model is public. The data flows are inspectable.
The fourteen rules the agent follows are versioned in a public repository. §12 is hard-coded; the rest can be amended only by signed releases.
Read constitution.md →Step-by-step adversary analysis: what a compromised iPhone can do, what a compromised Mac can do, what a compromised cloud account cannot do.
Read threat-model.pdf →Zero outbound traffic by default. Optional Claude bridge: opt-in, scoped per request, redacted before send. Verifiable via Little Snitch logs.
See network policy →A voice instrument for the desk, governed by rules you can read, running on metal you already own.