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SuperCmd

Open source alternative to Raycast Pro

Productivity
Developer Tools
Audio

SueprCmd is MacOs Launcher — open source alternative to Raycast Pro, WisprFlow, and Speechify in one place. With Raycast-compatible extensions, unlimited clipboard, notes, snippets, Excalidraw canvases, voice dictation with local models, text-to-speech from any app, a powerful calculator with live currency conversions, and AI via your own key or Ollama. Open source productivity suite to 10x yourself

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Hey Product Hunt! 👋 I built SuperCmd because I was tired of juggling Raycast, WisprFlow, Speechify, Notion, and Excalidraw, all with their own paywalls and limitations. SuperCmd brings it all together in one free, open-source app. 🚀 Launcher — Raycast-compatible extensions, clipboard history, snippets, quicklinks, hotkeys 📝 Notes — Notion + Markdown-style editor with unlimited boards 🎨 Excalidraw — Unlimited canvases built right in 🎙️ Voice — Dictation via local models (Parakeet v3, Whisper) or ElevenLabs 🔊 Read — Text-to-speech from any app in a natural voice 🧮 Calculator — Unit conversions, timezones, live currency rates 🤖 AI — BYO API key or run local LLMs through Ollama It hit 1k GitHub stars in the first 10 days, and the dev community feedback has been incredible. No accounts. No subscriptions. No limits. Just download and use it. I'd love to hear what you think and what features you'd want next! Drop a comment or leave a ⭐ on GitHub. 🔗 https://supercmd.sh 📦 https://github.com/SuperCmdLabs/...

Comment highlights

I never thought I'd give up Raycast, but after running this for a few hours, it has everything I use and and a couple of things I'm setting up to start using. Open Source FTW!

I'm curious about the sustainability here. The design is almost identical to Raycast, the features are the same, and you're using Raycast's open-source extensions. At some point, users will just use the original. The audacity to present this as original work is remarkable. There's no shame in being inspired by great products, but there should be shame in just copying them.

What’s the typical breaking point that makes someone actually switch—pricing, performance, privacy/offline needs, or a specific missing feature—and what do you do to make migration (hotkeys, snippets, clipboard habits) feel low-risk?