AI tool comparison
Dune vs Walkie
Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.
Productivity
Dune
A 3-key Mac keypad that changes what it does based on your active app
75%
Panel ship
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Community
Paid
Entry
Dune is a compact hardware keypad for Mac that detects your active application and automatically remaps its three keys in real time — no manual profile switching required. In GitHub it raises PRs and approves changes. In Zoom it mutes your mic and joins calls. In Claude Code or Cursor it triggers your agentic workflows directly from your desk. The device syncs with your calendar so meeting-join actions appear automatically before calls. It supports Zoom, Teams, and Google Meet natively. The maker community angle is notable: Dune users can program custom agent triggers to kick off any AI workflow from a physical button press. Dune topped Product Hunt's weekly leaderboard for the week of April 20 with 589 upvotes — a strong signal that developer-focused hardware AI accessories are a real market. This isn't just a fancy macro pad: the context awareness removes the mental overhead of remembering which key does what across 12 different apps.
Productivity
Walkie
Hold a hotkey, speak anywhere — local STT with zero data retention
50%
Panel ship
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Community
Free
Entry
Walkie is a Mac and Windows dictation app that turns any text field into a voice interface. Hold your hotkey, speak naturally, release—and your words appear in whatever app is active: Slack, VS Code, Gmail, Terminal, Notion, anywhere. The app runs on-device using your choice of 7+ local models (Whisper variants, NVIDIA Parakeet, Moonshine, SenseVoice) or can optionally route through cloud servers with a zero-data-retention policy. The differentiation from basic OS-level dictation is the AI post-processing layer: Fast Mode removes filler words ("um," "uh"), fixes grammar, and adapts formatting style based on context (formal, casual, technical). A custom dictionary learns your domain vocabulary—medical terms, product names, variable names—and a snippet system lets you trigger full text expansions with voice shortcodes. Launching on Product Hunt today (April 6, 2026) with 107 upvotes, Walkie sits at #6 on the daily leaderboard. The free tier is genuinely useful: unlimited local mode plus 4,000 Fast Mode words per week. Pro is $6/month for unlimited Fast Mode and advanced smart commands. It supports 100+ languages via Whisper.
Reviewer scorecard
“I lose an embarrassing amount of time hunting for the right shortcut in the right app. Having a physical device that reconfigures itself automatically is exactly the kind of ambient tooling I want on my desk. The AI agent trigger support is the killer feature.”
“Six dollars a month for unlimited voice-to-text across every app on my machine, with local processing as the default and filler word removal baked in. The snippet trigger feature alone is worth the price—I can say 'insert boilerplate' and have it expand a 200-word block. This is the Raycast of dictation tools.”
“Three keys is a very limited surface area for the price, and context detection reliability in niche dev tools is going to be hit-or-miss. A well-configured Stream Deck with a few profiles does 90% of this for less money.”
“Whisper-based dictation apps are practically a commodity at this point—Flow, Superwhisper, and even native OS dictation do most of this. The AI post-processing is nice but adds latency. And I'd want to see the 'zero data retention' claim independently audited before routing sensitive voice data through any cloud tier.”
“Physical buttons for AI agents are the beginning of a real ambient computing shift. As agentic workflows mature, having dedicated hardware triggers rather than keyboard shortcuts buried in menus is going to feel necessary, not optional.”
“Voice is the natural input layer for the agentic era—when agents can act on your behalf, you want to direct them by speaking. Walkie's voice command integration points toward this: not just dictating text but triggering OS-level actions by voice. The local-first model is also a meaningful privacy signal as voice data becomes more sensitive.”
“Context-switching kills creative flow. Having a keypad that automatically knows I'm in Figma versus in my writing app and changes its keys accordingly is worth a lot. Would buy this immediately for video editing alone.”
“As someone who writes 5,000 words of content a week, I've been burned by cloud-dependent voice tools going down at the worst moments. Walkie's local mode with 7 model choices is exactly what I need—reliable, fast, private. The snippet expansion feature for my frequently-used phrases is a genuine time saver.”
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