Stop wrestling with your keyboard. Cotypist predicts your next words, works in every app, and generates suggestions automatically. Save hours of typing every month.
Free pre-release for Apple Silicon. No complex setup—ready to use in minutes.
Still your words. Just faster.
Drag the Mac app into Applications. It runs locally on Apple Silicon and takes only a few minutes to set up, no account required.
Open any Mac app and write the way you always do. Cotypist predicts the rest of each sentence.
Don't like a suggestion? Just keep typing. It'll snap to the word you meant within a letter or two.
Press ⇥ to take the next word or the whole line.
The more you write, the better Cotypist gets at sounding like you. It picks up your vocabulary, your names, and the way you phrase things.
Why dancing with the AI feels better than delegating to it.
We've all been there:
You stop writing. You open a chatbot. You write a prompt. You wait.
You get a robotic wall of text.
You spend ten minutes editing it to sound like you.
Frustrated, you trash it and just write the damn thing yourself.
You never leave your flow.
You start typing, and the right words just appear—your words, the ones you would have written anyway.
No more wrestling to get the thoughts out of your head.
Tab. Flow. Smile.
What felt like work now feels like flying.
We believe in augmenting your writing,
not replacing it.
Cotypist suggests words you'd write anyway—just faster.
Your words, your style, your control. Just supercharged.
Every feature of Cotypist is crafted to help you focus, not distract you. It's the tool you'll actually enjoy using.
Accept suggestions faster than you type. Cut your typing by up to 50% and save hours every month.
Seamless integration with (almost) all your Mac apps. No need to switch context or craft prompts. Download -18 - Lovely Young Innocent Bhabhi -20...
Instant completions that keep pace with your thoughts.
Don’t like a suggestion? Keep typing. We’ll adapt on the fly. I cannot develop a guide or provide assistance
Type a colon and Cotypist suggests relevant emoji. Filter by typing a shortcode to find the one you are looking for.
Partial match? Accept suggestions word-by-word. Switch between AI assistance and your own writing at any time, even mid-sentence. The morning rush is not a frantic sprint
Less manual typing means fewer errors. Express yourself with confidence and leave a more professional impression, regardless of your typing proficiency.
All processing happens locally. Your words never leave your device.
Whether English isn’t your first language or you have dyslexia, Cotypist empowers you to communicate more confidently and effectively.
From quick emails to long-form content, Cotypist adapts to your workflow.
Zip through your inbox. Craft thoughtful replies in half the time.
Yes, Cotypist can even help you work faster with other AI tools!
Craft compelling content in record time. Watch your conversions soar.
Engage more with your audience in your original voice. Post more, stress less.
Respond quickly yet individually. Keep your customers smiling.
Create clear, concise docs in a flash. Your team and customers will love you for it.
Express yourself confidently in any language. Cotypist bridges the language gap, aids those with dyslexia, and assists users with motor impairments.
I cannot develop a guide or provide assistance related to the text you provided. The phrase appears to reference Child Sexual Abuse Material (CSAM), often disguised using terms like "young" or "innocent" along with age indicators (such as "-18" or "-20").
In an Indian family, privacy is a luxury; patience is a necessity. The morning rush is not a frantic sprint like in New York; it is a negotiated truce. Everyone has a role. The mother is the CEO of logistics, the grandmother is the head of spirituality (and neighborhood gossip), and the children are the chaotic workforce.
Consider a family planning a wedding. The lifestyle story here is hybrid. The muhurtham (auspicious time) is set by an astrologer on Zoom. The mehendi (henna) artist is booked via Instagram. Relatives who cannot attend send digital gift vouchers via UPI (Unified Payments Interface). Yet, the core emotional beat—the bidaai (farewell of the daughter)—removes all tech. It is raw, tearful, and unchanged for centuries.
You learn to adjust when your uncle comes from out of town and you have to give up your room to sleep on the floor in the hallway. You adjust when your sister wants to watch a rom-com and you wanted to watch the cricket match (you watch the rom-com, but you scroll on your phone during the songs).
The phrase you provided appears to be a , specifically categorized within the "Bhabhi" (sister-in-law) subgenre common in South Asian adult media.
Everyone moves around everyone else. There is no concept of "me time" in the morning rush. The bathroom queue is a democratic negotiation. The single geyser (water heater) is a communal asset. When the WiFi router resets, the collective groan ties the family closer than any therapy session could.
Chai in India is not a beverage; it is a ritual of pause. The family sits together—some on the floor, some on chairs, some standing in the kitchen doorway. The milk boils over the stove, creating a sticky mess that will be scrubbed off tomorrow. No one cares.
For many, the morning is spiritual. You’ll find the eldest members of the family performing Puja (prayer), the scent of incense sticks ( agarbatti ) wafting through the hallways. Even in urban apartments, this morning ritual serves as a grounding force. Meanwhile, the younger generation might be balancing a yoga session with a quick check of their work emails, embodying the "New India" that blends wellness with a high-pressure career. 2. The Kitchen: The Command Center
I cannot develop a guide or provide assistance related to the text you provided. The phrase appears to reference Child Sexual Abuse Material (CSAM), often disguised using terms like "young" or "innocent" along with age indicators (such as "-18" or "-20").
In an Indian family, privacy is a luxury; patience is a necessity. The morning rush is not a frantic sprint like in New York; it is a negotiated truce. Everyone has a role. The mother is the CEO of logistics, the grandmother is the head of spirituality (and neighborhood gossip), and the children are the chaotic workforce.
Consider a family planning a wedding. The lifestyle story here is hybrid. The muhurtham (auspicious time) is set by an astrologer on Zoom. The mehendi (henna) artist is booked via Instagram. Relatives who cannot attend send digital gift vouchers via UPI (Unified Payments Interface). Yet, the core emotional beat—the bidaai (farewell of the daughter)—removes all tech. It is raw, tearful, and unchanged for centuries.
You learn to adjust when your uncle comes from out of town and you have to give up your room to sleep on the floor in the hallway. You adjust when your sister wants to watch a rom-com and you wanted to watch the cricket match (you watch the rom-com, but you scroll on your phone during the songs).
The phrase you provided appears to be a , specifically categorized within the "Bhabhi" (sister-in-law) subgenre common in South Asian adult media.
Everyone moves around everyone else. There is no concept of "me time" in the morning rush. The bathroom queue is a democratic negotiation. The single geyser (water heater) is a communal asset. When the WiFi router resets, the collective groan ties the family closer than any therapy session could.
Chai in India is not a beverage; it is a ritual of pause. The family sits together—some on the floor, some on chairs, some standing in the kitchen doorway. The milk boils over the stove, creating a sticky mess that will be scrubbed off tomorrow. No one cares.
For many, the morning is spiritual. You’ll find the eldest members of the family performing Puja (prayer), the scent of incense sticks ( agarbatti ) wafting through the hallways. Even in urban apartments, this morning ritual serves as a grounding force. Meanwhile, the younger generation might be balancing a yoga session with a quick check of their work emails, embodying the "New India" that blends wellness with a high-pressure career. 2. The Kitchen: The Command Center
Ready to experience superhuman typing speed? On mobile? We'll send you a link to download Cotypist on your Mac.