I am exploring ways to work with my PC that doesnt involve always sitting at a desk and typing with hands like a cave man.
Testing out using Wispr Flow and similar voice inputs -- seems to work fine for some use cases.
I also place the laptop on a treadmill sometimes and try to to get some research / browsing / work done. Mouse (trackball) and typing are the current weakest link.
are there decent handheld input gadgets that allow simple trackpad / click / scroll up&down / next&previous type of navigation and a push-to-talk voice input? I am looking at cheap remotes for FireTV stick and other streaming boxes that seem to have voice input -- anyway one could hack one of those to do our bidding and pair with a PC?
It sounds like you want a dictation mic. Philips’s SpeechMike and OM System’s (formerly Olympus) RecMic are big in the healthcare space. My SpeechMike is wireless with a USB dongle and has something akin to a trackpoint for mouse movement, and buttons that can be programmed to send keystrokes.
Dictation mics are not cheap, unfortunately, but you may be able to get used ones for much less.
I've been down this rabbit hole. Here's what actually works:
For navigation:
Kensington Expert Wireless Trackball – big enough to use without precision, scroll ring around the ball, sits anywhere
8BitDo Micro – programmable Bluetooth gamepad, works as presentation clicker + arrow keys, very hackable
Xbox Adaptive Controller – overkill but lets you plug in literally any button
For voice:
Wispr Flow (you're already using) – good
Talon Voice – free, hackable, lets you control everything with voice + eye tracking if you add Tobii
Windows Speech Recognition / macOS Dictation – basic but built-in
The streaming remote hack: Yes, you can. Most use standard Bluetooth HID profiles. Pair them, then use something like JoyToKey (Windows) or Karabiner (macOS) to remap buttons to keyboard shortcuts.
My current lazy setup:
Recliner + lap desk
8BitDo Micro in left hand (next/prev/play/voice toggle)
Trackball in right hand
Voice for text input
Feels slightly less caveman. Slightly.
Yes, but its gonna be weird. I've done very tangentially related work with game controllers, and my suspicion is you're gonna have to try a few (dozen?) before you find one that even sends reasonable commands. I can imagine a FireTV stick sending game controller inputs. I have no idea, but that's the type of thing that might go wrong.
A MX3 air mouse might be the exact thing you want though.
A few months ago I put together a library that lets you use a Nintendo Switch JoyCon 1 (the JoyCon 2s can't connect to bluetooth) or a Playstation VR controller to a Mac in order to control the mouse, use a radial menu, etc: https://github.com/jturnshek/JamCon
I map one of the keys to voice input push-to-talk for handy: https://handy.computer/
This involved reverse engineering and writing new drivers for both (with no existing reference for the PSVR). It's all in that library, so if that sounds interesting to you, you can probably get Claude/Codex/whatever to convert it to a Windows app pretty quickly.
I haven't been maintaining this tool actively, but maybe it's useful to someone.
They make trackball clickers[1] (often with a laser since they're for presentations), and other single handed devices, a search for "finger mouse" surfaces a few different devices
I don't know if any of them have PTT with microphone but you should be able to pair the clicker with a regular bluetooth headset, while the headset may be on all the time you might be able to use something like joy-2-key and a macro/hotkey utility to map the button press to mic mute.
[1] https://www.amazon.com/Wireless-Handheld-Finger-Trackball-Po...
Maybe some of the modern game controllers could fit, I know some of them have mic jacks but I don't know if any have built microphones. They fit the bill for handheld trackpad/etc with plenty of buttons at least.
I was looking into this when I got sick and couldn't type anymore. There are some corporate presentation tools that have directional buttons and also mics. I think Microsoft presenter is one? In the end i just ended up using my phone.
Relatedly, I want a bluetooth "skip 30s" button to use while listening to podcasts on iPhone. Anyone have a recommendation?
Windows 11 has a "voice access" application that is amazing, seemingly hidden, and much better than the other built-in Win voice svcs. Voice Access is fully local, poorly documented, and the advanced settings menu is hidden.
*Quick guide to save you time:
-you can say "scroll to top/bottom", "click ok", "open Firefox", etc.
-it will always be typing when you talk unless it a) hears a command, b) you say "command mode", which will listen only for commands, or c) you mute:
-"mute" puts mic to sleep so you don't accidentally type when speaking ("unmute" to unmute)
-say "what can I say" to open advanced menu, allowing you to setup custom voice commands ("open projects folder", "open xyz website", etc.). Works well!
-full voice control of mouse is possible but a little slow. "Open grid" splits screen into a numbered 3x3 grid. You pick a number, it creates a new 3x3 grid in side the box you chose, and repeat until you can tell it to click.
The other thing I tried on Android is Futo voice input via F-droid + an app that turns you phone into a bluetooth keyboard (so as I spoke, it "typed" on the target device). The keyboard app is "Bluetooth Keyboard & Mouse"). It worked smoothly sometimes and other times not.