Wispr Flow for Windows with universal dictation across any text field is the capability that changes who the tool is for
Universal dictation capability across any application with a text input field is the breadth that makes it a workflow tool rather than a specific-application feature. Dictating in Notion, in Slack, in a code editor, in a form field in a browser, in an email client, all through the same interface, changes the friction of voice input across your entire workflow rather than within a single application.
The system tray integration with customisable settings for microphone and language being the configuration interface is the always-available access model that changes how you interact with the tool. It runs in the background and is available whenever you are in a text field rather than requiring you to open an application.
The shortcut toggle and push-to-talk recording modes being configurable is the workflow adaptation that lets you choose whether voice input is always on or gesture-activated based on your preferred working style and physical environment.
The instant transcription as you speak rather than requiring a voice memo and batch processing step is the latency reduction that changes dictation from a workflow interruption to a continuous input method.
For Windows users specifically: what text-heavy application in your daily workflow would benefit most from always-available voice dictation?