I wanted exactly that for my Mac and ended up with a working version with the help of Claude in about one day (my first swift app!) It took a couple more days of working with it and asking claude to add any feature I felt I was missing and now i’m pretty happy with it. I still use my airpods or the laptop mic as primary audio input, but I have one button mapped to super whisper for speech to text input (first button I mapped). I can control the mouse and scroll with the joysticks, but my primary use case is to navigate tmux/claude sessions in the terminal. It works great with workmux. For the rest, I mostly map buttons to my existing raycast shortcuts.
It will sure beat the old laser pointer the next time I have to present or teach.
I could make the repo public if anyone is interested.
Well, that's pretty much what an academic research paper is, at least in that field (a PDF plus the code to back it up). It's not the result that's most important here; it's that the process mimics how a paper like that one would have been written 3 years ago, but much, much faster.
I make a point of only using references that are either available for free online or through our university’s library subscriptions. These are all electronic. My open book exam became an open computer exam when I realized students were printing hundreds of pages just for a 3-hour exam. This semester I’m switching to no-computer, bring your own printed cheat-sheet for the exam.
It will sure beat the old laser pointer the next time I have to present or teach.
I could make the repo public if anyone is interested.