Tech News
← Back to articles

Why You Should Be Using ChatGPT's Voice Mode More Often

read original related products more articles

I used to treat ChatGPT like a smarter search engine: Type a prompt, wait for a response and repeat. Then I started using ChatGPT's Voice Mode more regularly, and it quickly changed how I interact with the AI chatbot. Talking instead of typing makes conversations flow more naturally and often gets me to better answers faster than staring at a blinking cursor.

This isn't just a voice-to-text feature. It feels like having a real, fluid conversation. It intelligently waits for you to finish your thought, understands your natural pauses, and doesn't get thrown off by "ums" or stammers. I can use it while I'm cooking or driving, speaking like a normal human without carefully planning my every word.

It's not just faster than typing -- it's a genuinely more intuitive and useful way to interact with AI. If you've been ignoring it, you're missing out.

Don't miss: What Is ChatGPT? Everything You Need to Know About the AI Chatbot

ChatGPT, from OpenAI, isn't the only chatbot going hands-free. Google's Gemini Live offers the same "talk over me, and I'll keep up" vibe. Anthropic's Claude has a beta version of its voice mode on its mobile apps, complete with on-screen bullet points as it speaks, and Perplexity's iOS and Android assistant also answers spoken questions and launches apps like OpenTable or Uber on command.

Don't miss any of our unbiased tech content and lab-based reviews. Add CNET as a preferred Google source.

But even with everyone racing to master real-time AI conversation, ChatGPT remains my go-to. Whatever your chatbot of choice, take a break from typing and try out the voice option. It's far more useful than you think.

(Disclosure: Ziff Davis, CNET's parent company, in April filed a lawsuit against OpenAI, alleging it infringed Ziff Davis copyrights in training and operating its AI systems.)

Watch this: ChatGPT's Viral Feature: Turning People Into Action Figures 01:19

What exactly is voice mode?

... continue reading