Nothing introduces an AI-powered dictation tool

TechCrunch / 4/24/2026

📰 NewsTools & Practical UsageIndustry & Market Moves

Key Points

  • Nothingは、音声を整形されたテキストに変換するAI搭載のディクテーション(Essential Voice)を発表し、アプリ内どこでも利用できるとしています。
  • 「um」や「ah」などのつなぎ言葉を除去しつつ、単語・リンク・テンプレ・反復フレーズ向けのカスタム音声ショートカット(例:『my address』で住所の全文入力)を作成可能です。
  • 現時点ではPhone(3)で提供され、Phone(4a)Proは今月後半のロールアウト予定、Phone(4a)は来月対応予定です。
  • アクセス方法はEssentialキーの長押し/キーボードからの起動で、SuperwhisperがiPhone向けに提供したアクションキー連携のディクテーション機能と類似しています。
  • Essential Voiceでは、起動時点で100以上の言語に対応するテキストの直接翻訳機能も用意されています。

In the last few years, AI-powered dictation tools have taken off. In addition to existing dictation apps like Wispr Flow, SuperWhisper, Willow, and Monolouge, new ones are being launched every week. On Thursday, hardware company Nothing launched a competitive product of its own, called Essential Voice.

The core idea is similar to other dictation apps, as Essential Voice works in any app to turn your speech into formatted text, removing filler words like “um” and “ah” along the way. The company said that you can also create custom voice shortcuts for words, links, templates, and repeated phrases. For instance, you can assign the “my address” shortcut to your full address.

At the moment, the feature is available on the Phone (3) with rollout for Phone (4a) Pro planned for later this month, and support for Phone (4a) arriving next month.

The average person types 36 words a minute on a phone.

But, they can say it four times faster.

Essential Voice turns your speech into clear, ready-to-use writing. pic.twitter.com/l08bnS8sNF

— Essential (@essential) April 23, 2026

To access the feature, users either press the Essential key on devices where it is present or activate it from the keyboard. The feature is similar to the one that Superwhisper released earlier this week for iPhone users, which allows them to map the iPhone’s action key to the app’s keyboard for dictation.

Nothing’s new tool can also translate text directly from one language to another. At launch, Nothing said the feature supports over 100 languages. Going forward, it will also introduce app-based custom styling, meaning you’ll be able to change the tone of the AI editing within app categories, like work and messaging.

Nothing is one of the first companies to offer a system-level integration for dication. However, based on Google’s recent release of its offline dictation app, we might see more companies release similar tools in the future.