what it looks like when you talk and it becomes a row
Yesterday during a team walkthrough, someone said: "add a row, contact, John, met at coffee, follow up Friday."
And there it was. A row. Columns filled. No typing.
We build Voice Tables at Inithouse, a studio shipping a growing portfolio of products in parallel. The whole premise is simple: what if your voice was the input method for structured data?
Here is what happens. Your voice goes through a transcription layer, then a language model parses it into fields: name, category, note, date. The table updates in real time. No forms, no dropdowns, no clicking into cells.
Typing works fine when you are at a desk. But most capturing does not happen at a desk. It happens between meetings, on a walk, in the car. By the time you sit down and open a spreadsheet, half the details are gone.
We noticed the same pattern across our portfolio. At Be Recommended, users want to run a quick AI visibility check without filling out long forms. At Here We Ask, the entire conversation card game runs without any account creation. Reducing friction at the input layer keeps showing up as the thing that matters most.
Voice Tables is in open beta at voicetables.com. We are still learning what people reach for first when they start talking to a table instead of typing into one.
At Inithouse, we ship many products in parallel because each one teaches us something the others cannot. This one is teaching us about voice as a primary interface.











