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Late April 2026: Built to Never Lose a Word

A reliability update for Glaido. Fewer dropped sentences, faster first-press dictations, calmer behavior on shaky networks, and a tighter sense of when to stay out of your way.

By Glaido Team

A release you mostly won't see

Most of what shipped this round is invisible.

You won't see new buttons. You won't see new menus. What you should notice is this: Glaido just works more often, in more places, with less in the way.

Here's what's better.


You won't lose your sentence

You know that moment when you press your hotkey, say something you actually wanted to keep, and… nothing shows up?

That moment is now gone.

Glaido is better at hanging on to what you said even when something on your machine, your network, or the broader universe is having a bad day. Hotel Wi-Fi, conference networks, the in-flight connection that politely lies about being internet — they all stand a much smaller chance of swallowing your words.

You speak. It comes out. That's the whole job.


Faster from the very first press

Short presses: the quick "yes please," the one-line Slack reply, the fire-and-forget message — used to occasionally take a slower route, just because they ended before everything was fully ready.

Not anymore. Even your fastest dictation now takes the fast lane.

You shouldn't notice the difference. That's how you know it's working.


Tighter security, in the boring-good way

We tightened how Glaido talks to the outside world.

In practice, this means stronger guarantees that your audio and text only travel over modern, encrypted connections, across every part of the app, not just the obvious ones. The kind of upgrade you only notice if it's missing, and we'd rather you never have to think about it.


Why we sweat releases like this

Voice dictation only earns a permanent spot in your workflow when you can fully trust it.

A tool that occasionally drops your sentence, occasionally records when you didn't ask, or occasionally takes the long way around, that's a tool you'll quietly stop using, even if you can't quite articulate why.

This release is one more long step toward dictation that you don't have to think about. You press, you talk, your words land where you expect. The keyboard becomes the optional thing.


Keep the feedback coming

If you hit something flaky, weird, or just wrong, tell us. Every release is shaped by what you send our way, and the things that get reported are the things that get fixed.

More — and quieter — to come.