Run your whole Mac
out loud.
A native menu-bar agent that controls your entire Mac by voice — open apps, send messages, change settings, run multi-step tasks. It plans each step on a floating status bar and confirms it worked before moving on.
Click the download button above to get speaktobrowse-mac.dmg. Double-click it, then drag the speaktobrowse app into your Applications folder.
The build isn't notarized yet, so macOS will block the first launch with “Apple could not verify…”. Click OK, open System Settings → Privacy & Security, scroll down, and hit “Open Anyway”. You only do this once. (Terminal one-liner below if you prefer.)
It lives in your menu bar (look for the waveform icon — there's no Dock icon). Click it, grant Microphone, Accessibility, and Screen Recording when asked, then toggle it on and start talking.
- 1.Click Download for Mac above. Your browser saves speaktobrowse-mac.dmg.
- 2.Double-click the .dmg to mount it. A window opens with the app and a shortcut to your Applications folder.
- 3.Drag speaktobrowse onto the Applications folder to install it.
- 4.Double-click speaktobrowse in Applications. macOS shows “Apple could not verify…” — click OK. Then open System Settings → Privacy & Security, scroll to the bottom, and click Open Anyway next to the speaktobrowse line. Confirm with your password. macOS remembers this — future launches are normal.
- 5.The app has no Dock icon — find the waveform icon in your menu bar (top-right of the screen). Click it.
- 6.Grant the three permissions it needs when prompted: Microphone (to hear you), Accessibility (to click and type for you), and Screen Recording(to see what’s on screen). Each opens System Settings → add speaktobrowse and toggle it on.
- 7.Toggle it onand try something: “open Safari and go to Hacker News,” or “turn my volume down to 20%.”
Strips the “downloaded from internet” quarantine flag that triggers Gatekeeper. Open Terminal (Applications → Utilities) and run:
xattr -dr com.apple.quarantine /Applications/Speaktobrowse.app
Then open the app normally. Apple notarization (which removes this step entirely) is on the way.
speaktobrowse acts on your Mac the way you would — so it needs to see the screen, move the pointer, and type. Everything runs locally except the voice and reasoning models. You can revoke any permission anytime in System Settings → Privacy & Security.