Talk to AI naturally and get real-time information from the web.
Talking to AI with Voice Mode
Sometimes typing isn't the most natural way to communicate. Maybe you're cooking, driving, exercising, or just thinking out loud. Voice mode lets you speak to Gab AI naturally and hear its responses read back to you — like having a knowledgeable conversation partner always available.
Voice mode isn't just speech-to-text dictation. It's a fully conversational experience where you can interrupt, ask follow-ups, change topics, and have a real back-and-forth dialogue — all without touching your keyboard.
Voice mode works everywhere
You can use voice mode on any device — phone, tablet, or desktop. It's especially useful on mobile where typing long prompts can be cumbersome.
When Voice Mode Shines
Voice mode opens up scenarios where typing would be impractical or where thinking out loud produces better results:
Tips for Better Voice Conversations
Speak naturally — don't try to talk like a robot. The AI understands conversational language.
Pause briefly between thoughts to help the AI understand where one idea ends and another begins.
Say 'let me finish' if the AI tries to respond before you're done speaking a longer thought.
Use voice to dictate long-form content like journal entries, blog drafts, or meeting notes — it's much faster than typing.
Combine voice with your custom agents for an even more personalized experience.
Voice + Memory = magic
When you use voice mode with saved memories, the AI already knows your context. You can jump straight into "Help me debug this API issue" without explaining your entire tech stack — it already knows.
Web Search: Real-Time Information
Standard AI models have a knowledge cutoff — they were trained on data up to a certain date and don't know about events, updates, or changes that happened after that. Web search bridges this gap by letting Gab AI search the internet in real-time to find current information.
When web search is active, the AI can pull in live data to answer your questions. It will cite its sources so you can verify the information and dig deeper if needed.
Combining Voice, Search, and More
The real power of Gab AI comes from combining features. Each feature is useful on its own, but together they create an experience far greater than the sum of its parts.
Experiment with combinations
The users who get the most value from AI are the ones who combine features creatively. Try using voice mode with a custom agent, or enabling web search while working with your coding assistant. Each combination unlocks new workflows.
Voice mode works everywhere
You can use voice mode on any device — phone, tablet, or desktop. It's especially useful on mobile where typing long prompts can be cumbersome.
Hands-Free Assistance — Ask for recipe steps while your hands are covered in flour. Get directions while driving. Dictate notes while walking. Voice mode frees you from the screen without losing access to AI.
Brainstorming and Thinking Out Loud — Some ideas flow better when you speak them. Use voice mode to brainstorm, talk through a problem, or workshop ideas in real-time. The AI can push back, ask clarifying questions, and help you refine your thinking.
Practice Conversations — Preparing for a job interview? Rehearsing a presentation? Practicing a difficult conversation? Voice mode lets you simulate real dialogues. Ask the AI to play the role of an interviewer, audience member, or conversation partner.
Language Practice — Practice speaking a foreign language with an AI that's infinitely patient, never judgmental, and available 24/7. You can ask it to correct your pronunciation hints, adjust difficulty, and focus on specific vocabulary or grammar.
Voice + Memory = magic
When you use voice mode with saved memories, the AI already knows your context. You can jump straight into "Help me debug this API issue" without explaining your entire tech stack — it already knows.
Current Events and News — Ask about today's headlines, recent announcements, or ongoing events. The AI searches the web and synthesizes what it finds into a clear, organized summary.
Real-Time Data — Check stock prices, weather forecasts, sports scores, or product pricing. Web search gives the AI access to information that changes by the minute.
Latest Documentation and Updates — Working with a library that just released a new version? Web search lets the AI find the latest docs, changelogs, and migration guides — not the outdated information from its training data.
Fact-Checking and Verification — Not sure if the AI's response is accurate? Ask it to search the web and verify. This is especially useful for statistics, quotes, historical dates, and rapidly evolving topics.
Voice + Web Search — Ask the AI to search for something using voice: "Hey, search the web for the best restaurants in downtown Austin that opened in the last 6 months." Get a spoken summary back while you're walking or driving.
Agents + Memory + Voice — Imagine a study tutor agent that remembers the subjects you're studying, knows your learning style (saved in memory), and can quiz you out loud through voice mode during your commute.
Web Search + Collections — Do a research session with web search enabled, then save the conversation to a collection. You now have an organized archive of AI-synthesized research with cited sources you can revisit anytime.
Experiment with combinations
The users who get the most value from AI are the ones who combine features creatively. Try using voice mode with a custom agent, or enabling web search while working with your coding assistant. Each combination unlocks new workflows.
Voice mode enables natural, hands-free conversation with AI — ideal for brainstorming, practice interviews, dictation, and on-the-go assistance.
Web search gives AI access to real-time information, bridging the gap between its training data cutoff and the present. It cites sources so you can verify.
The most powerful workflows come from combining features — voice with web search, agents with memory, research with collections.
Speak naturally in voice mode and don't be afraid to interrupt, redirect, or ask follow-ups just like in a human conversation.