Typeless went down for a few hours tonight.
Not because nobody cared.
Because too many people cared.
Traffic grew faster than our servers could handle, and for a short window, Typeless was unavailable.
It was painful. Embarrassing. Not acceptable.
But the part I can't stop thinking about is what happened next.
Our inbox, DMs, and mentions started filling up with messages from users saying they literally couldn't work without Typeless.
“Without Typeless, I can't survive.”
“I didn't realize how much I depended on it until it went down.”
“Going back to typing feels like going back to the Stone Age.”
“I use voice input for 90% of my work now.”
“Fix it ASAP. I can't work.”
This is the weirdest founder emotion:
You're stressed because the product is down.
But also quietly shocked because the outage proves the product has become part of people's daily workflow.
That is what we're building.
Not another dictation app.
Not a nicer keyboard.
Typeless is rebuilding the interface between humans and computers - around voice.
You speak naturally - messy thoughts, half-formed ideas, raw intent - and Typeless turns it into clear, structured, perfect text.
The goal is simple:
Speak, don't type.
Tonight was a reminder that when voice becomes good enough, people don't want to go back.
We're back online now.
And we're scaling everything.
Thank you for the emails, the DMs, the posts, the panic, and the pressure.
We hear you.
Literally.