Q: Having the ability to create custom use cases can be beneficial.
For instance, instead of just transcribing notes, one might want to generate something more useful. Adjusting the base prompt could greatly expand its applications. Can you see yourself implementing this?
romanoganesian
Jun 30, 2024A: Hi there!
If I understood the question correctly, then yes, we have a couple of ideas:
1. Custom prompts. We want to give users the ability to customize their prompts. The simplest example is adding a signature to emails automatically, instead of typing it manually each time.
2. Shortcuts. This feature will speed up tasks that you do several times a day. For example, a tweet shortcut that transcribes and applies the necessary prompt immediately.
3. We have another idea that I can't talk about yet, but it's really cool :))
Sorry if I misunderstood your question. Please don't hesitate to clarify.
Custom prompts entirely. Not at the end. For example. Instead of just note taking it actually does what the note says. Lets say my prompt is follow the transcription verbatim. I might say can you create a recipe for beef chili, create the shopping list and turn this in to an email to my wife Kim. Boom. Maybe have an action that is follow the note exactly as a prompt. This would be easy & awesome.
Interesting idea! Although I must admit that we haven't planned for something where you would speak the prompt aloud. It seems that ChatGPT would be more suitable for these purposes. We aim to make Letterly a convenient and focused tool. However, this doesn't rule out the possibility that we might eventually allow custom prompts to be set not only in the settings but also spoken aloud. Thank you!