Your typing.
Just… faster.
AutoTyper types any text into any document at human speed — with the typos, pauses, and rhythm that make it look real.
The French Revolution: An Essay
Three steps. About six seconds.
Built for the moment before a deadline. No accounts, no setup, no learning curve.
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01
Open your document.
Google Docs, Word, Notion, an email, a form field — anywhere you can type, AutoTyper can type.
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02
Paste your text. Or generate it.
Drop in something you wrote, or use the built-in AI to draft from a topic. Tweak the WPM, target tone, and typo density.
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03
Switch windows. Walk away.
Eight-second countdown, then AutoTyper takes over your keyboard and types like a person who actually thinks while they write.
Looks like you wrote it.
Because it does.
Three things that separate AutoTyper from a glorified copy-paste macro.
Rhythm, not a metronome.
Real typists speed up on common words and slow down on tricky ones. AutoTyper modulates inter-keystroke delay against a target WPM with controlled jitter — never a flat, robotic line.
- Configurable WPM target (20–110)
- Word-aware pause distribution
- Idle micro-pauses every 8–14 words
Bring text. Or just bring a topic.
Skip the blank page. Type a prompt, pick a length, and AutoTyper drafts it for you — then types it out exactly as if you had written it yourself.
- Topic → essay, summary, or notes
- Tone presets: academic, casual, technical
- Edit the draft before typing begins
Mistypes. Backspaces. Corrections.
Roughly every 25th keystroke, AutoTyper hits the wrong adjacent key, hesitates, backspaces, and types the right one — the same way you would, with the same slightly guilty pause.
- Adjacent-key error model
- 4% default typo rate (configurable)
- Pause distribution matches real correction latency
Free. No setup.
Just download and go.
One installer. No Python, no Node, no accounts. Quit anytime from the tray.
Questions you'd ask before downloading.
If your question isn't here, the answer is probably "yes, and it's free."
Esc or move the mouse. AutoTyper aborts immediately and returns control of the keyboard. There's also a panic hotkey you can set in preferences.