Voice & one-tap logging
Voice & one-tap workout logging for hockey players
You log a hockey workout the moment you finish a set. Tap once to repeat your last set, or speak the exercise, weight, and reps. Voice transcription gives you an estimate to review, and you confirm the draft before anything is logged — so capture stays fast and the record stays yours, in any browser.
How to log a workout by voice
- 1
Tap to repeat or start
Tap once to repeat your last set, or start a new set.
- 2
Speak your set
Say the exercise, weight, and reps; voice transcription gives you an estimate to review.
- 3
Confirm the draft
Review the draft and confirm it before it logs; a surprising personal record is flagged, not silently written.
Why the capture path is built to be trustworthy
The point of fast logging is not speed for its own sake — it is that the set you just finished actually lands, once, and correctly. Every capture path here, whether you tap or speak, writes through the same workout logger the rest of the app uses. Voice never takes a shortcut around it, so a set logged by voice is the same kind of record as one you type by hand.
One-tap “repeat last set.” Most strength work is the same load for several sets, so the fastest honest log is a single tap that repeats your last set. You do not re-enter the exercise, the weight, or the reps — you confirm a copy and move on.
Voice is an estimate you confirm. When you speak a set, voice transcription proposes the exercise, weight, and reps as an estimate, not a fact. It opens as a draft you review and confirm before it logs. A misheard “fifteen” for “fifty” is something you correct in the draft, not a wrong number that silently lands in your history.
An offline outbox with no double-logging. Rink Wi-Fi is unreliable, so a set you log offline is held in an outbox and replayed when you reconnect. Each set carries its own session key, so if a replay retries, the logger recognizes the set it has already seen and does not write it again. You never come home to a workout with every set logged twice.
A surprising personal record becomes a guarded draft. If a set would set a personal record that looks surprising — the kind of jump a misheard number would cause — it is flagged as a confirmable, guarded draft rather than silently written. You confirm it if it is real; an estimate never overwrites your genuine progress by accident. That is the honesty of the capture path: it is designed to be reliable and confirm-first, not to make a claim about how you perform.
Frequently asked questions
- How does voice workout logging work?
- Tap once to repeat your last set, or speak the exercise, weight, and reps. Voice transcription gives you an estimate, and you confirm the draft before anything is logged through the same workout logger you already use.
- What if I'm offline at the rink?
- Your set is held in an offline outbox and replayed when you reconnect. Each set carries a session key so a replay never logs the same set twice — no double-logged sets.
- Is the voice transcription accurate?
- It's an estimate you confirm. Voice transcription proposes the exercise, weight, and reps; you review and confirm the draft before it logs, so a misheard number never lands silently.
- What happens to a surprising personal record?
- A set that would set a surprising personal record becomes a confirmable, guarded draft. It is flagged for you to confirm rather than silently written, so an estimate never overwrites your real history by accident.
- Do I need a special app?
- No. Voice and one-tap logging work in any browser, so you can log a set rinkside or at home on any device. There is no separate install to download.
Keep exploring
- Season-Phase Training
The pillar: how your programming shifts across off-, pre-, in-season, and playoffs.
- Hockey Workouts
Hockey-specific workouts you can log one set at a time.
- Training Programs
Structured programs built with professional hockey players.
Start logging in any browser
Tap once or speak your set, confirm the draft, and get back to training.