Exemplary Use Cases
Here are some ideas on how to use Talk to be more productive:
Quickly capture tasks on the go.
Plan your week: Open Talk and offload all your tasks for the week, along with the dates when you plan to work on them.
Write messages without typing: Open Talk, ask to create a task to message XYZ, and then dictate the message. Once you are done, you’ll find the task with the message in your Superlist.
Capture quick ideas: Open a list, start Talk, and just dictate your ideas. Talk will create a document with all your ideas. You can even ask it to summarize or structure your input, just like ChatGPT.
Six Strategies for Getting Better Results
Know what you want: If you use Talk to figure out what you want to do, it might not match your expectations. But if you already know what you want and use Talk as a way to brain dump into your Superlist, it will perform better.
Talk like you’re typing: Speak in a structured way as if you’re typing into Superlist, rather than loosely speaking and expecting the model to figure it out.
Maintain sequential flow: Start with topic A, move to B, and then C. Avoid jumping back and forth between topics.
Single-purpose sessions: While task-enriching works, it’s better to keep each session focused. If you need a task with lots of detail, use a single session just for that task.
Be specific: If you want everything added as a single task, say so. If you want subtasks, specify that too. The more instructions you give, the better it will match what you imagined.
Speak clearly: Just like a phone call, clear speech and diction will ensure Talk captures your words accurately.