Founder Note

A Bigger, More Human Voqio: What We’ve Been Building

A warm founder update from Chris on Voqio’s new voices, smarter roundtables, easier navigation, public examples, and a few ideas we’re excited to explore next.

Christopher Miles · Founder of Voqio · July 18, 2026

When Voqio first came to life, the idea was simple: ask one question and let leading AI models respond to one another instead of answering in isolation.


That simple idea has grown quickly—and I wanted to pause for a moment to share what we have been building together.


Voqio is becoming a real roundtable


You can now choose the order in which ChatGPT, Grok, and Claude speak. The response cards follow that same order, so the conversation is easier to read from first perspective to last. If you want more structure, Advanced Facilitation adds optional templates, specialized roles, and an AI Moderator. If you prefer the original simple experience, those controls stay neatly out of the way.


We have also made the workspace easier to use on phones, improved navigation, added clear light and dark themes, and created a Surprise Me prompt button for those moments when curiosity is there but the perfect question is not.


Now you can listen, too


One of my favorite recent additions is read-aloud playback. Every generated response now includes a Listen button, and users can choose a natural speech voice available on their device. Signed-in members have that preference remembered by their Voqio account.


It changes the experience more than I expected. Listening makes a roundtable feel less like reading three separate answers and more like hearing different participants work through an idea together.


Your conversations can stay with you


Voqio now saves recent conversations, restores them when signed-in users return, and lets people copy previous transcripts. Members begin with five history slots and can expand their archive when they need more room.


We also introduced a permission-based Examples library. When someone explicitly allows anonymous publication, we can curate a useful roundtable for others to explore. This helps new visitors understand what Voqio does while keeping consent and privacy at the center.


A smoother way to begin


Visitors can try a free roundtable directly from the homepage before deciding whether to create an account. Experienced users can still bring their own API keys, while Voqio credits offer a simpler path for everyone else.


Behind the scenes, we have also added the Voqio blog, a protected owner dashboard, member and credit management, contact messaging, stronger mobile layouts, clearer privacy controls, and a long list of small refinements that make the whole product feel more complete.


A few hints about what may come next


We are exploring richer audio experiences, including the possibility of listening to an entire roundtable as a continuous conversation. We are also thinking about better visual comparisons, stronger post-session summaries, collaborative sharing, prompt refinement, more model choices, and new ways to turn a thoughtful discussion into an actionable decision.


Some of those ideas will take time, and the best ones will be shaped by how people actually use Voqio. I would rather build carefully than add features simply to make the list longer.


What excites me most is that Voqio is beginning to feel like the product I imagined: not another chatbot, but a place where different forms of intelligence can meet—and where the human asking the question remains in charge.


Thank you to everyone testing, sharing feedback, and believing in this with me. We are still early, and that is exactly what makes this stage so special.


— Chris Miles, Founder of Voqio