If you can say it, you can code it.

Still coding. Not stuck at the keyboard.

DevCue One lets you use natural language to direct Codex, Claude Code, Gemini, and other coding tools, so work starts moving the moment you speak. Less keyboard time, more parallel momentum, and real progress even when you step away from the desk.

  • Speak to Codex / Claude Code / Gemini
  • Parallel work keeps moving
  • Half-reclined coding is real

One spoken request, multiple things moving

You say

"Tighten the launch page copy, sync English too, and make the whole thing hit harder."

The app fans it out

That request keeps its context, spreads across active work, and keeps moving while you handle something else.

You come back to progress

By the time you look again, the work has advanced instead of waiting for you to sit back down.

Why people remember it

  • Spoken coding feels natural within minutes
  • Parallel work keeps moving without micromanaging every step
  • The keyboard stops being the price of staying productive

FLOW

Three beats: say it, leave it, come back to momentum.

This product makes sense in moments, not configuration screens. You speak, the work spreads out, and you return to progress instead of dead air.

01

Say it the way it comes to mind

Ideas, fixes, rewrites, priorities, and tone can all be spoken naturally. You do not need to flatten your thoughts into command syntax first.

02

Let several threads move in parallel

New work does not have to wait in line behind old work. DevCue One keeps multiple streams moving so your day can stay messy without stalling.

03

Rejoin without reloading your brain

When you come back, you see progress, context, and the next move in one place instead of reconstructing the situation from scratch.

HIGHLIGHTS

It is not selling voice input. It is selling freedom from the desk.

The special part is not that it transcribes words. The special part is that coding can keep moving while your attention briefly lives elsewhere.

SPOKEN CODING

Talk to the work like it is already alive

Ask for edits, direction, tone, or follow-ups in plain language and let the product turn that into forward motion.

PARALLEL

More than one thing can move at once

You can keep a rewrite, a fix, and a follow-up all advancing together instead of babysitting one task at a time.

AWAY FROM DESK

Your body can leave the keyboard

Coffee break, messages, a quick lap around the room, even a half-reclined reset. The work does not need you frozen in front of a monitor.

REENTRY

Coming back feels instant, not expensive

Context and progress stay visible, so stepping away no longer means paying a mental tax to restart.

SHOWCASE

People remember three moments, not twelve feature bullets.

These are the moments that sell the product in real life: when you speak, when you step away, and when you return.

The moment you speak

A natural sentence carries intent, tone, and direction without forcing you to translate yourself into CLI grammar.

Say it like a person, not a config file.

The moment you walk away

Work keeps running while you grab coffee, answer messages, or let your eyes leave the screen for a minute.

The desk stops being a leash.

The moment you sit back down

Instead of a blank reset, you come back to visible progress and a clear next move.

Leave. Return. Keep going.

STACK

This fits real days, not idealized desk time.

If your attention gets interrupted by chats, meetings, walking, or sudden ideas, this workflow feels more honest than sit still and type until it is done.

Great for broken-up time

Short pockets of time become usable because you can speak work forward instead of waiting for a full keyboard session.

Built for multi-threaded brains

If you naturally jump between ideas, DevCue One lets those threads keep moving instead of punishing the switch.

Less chair time, more progress

The point is not to type faster. The point is to let progress continue without treating the chair as mandatory.

DevCue One

Free the hands. Keep the momentum.

DevCue One is for people who want coding to move with their voice, their day, and their attention span instead of being locked to the keyboard.