According to The Register, Myna will be a local speech-to-text feature slated for the next Ubuntu release.
Canonical has introduced Myna, a voice-to-text transcription app set to run locally on Ubuntu, according to a report by The Register. The publication states that the feature is part of the company's plans for Ubuntu 26.10, a version identified by the codename Stonking Stingray.
According to The Register, Myna follows Canonical's tradition of using bird-related names for its AI initiatives. The report describes the proposal as offering speech recognition without necessarily relying on cloud processing, a key point for applications involving user audio and potentially sensitive data.
The report does not detail which models will be used, which languages will be available at launch, or whether Myna will be distributed as a default installation component. The provided source also lacks information on hardware requirements, expected performance, or integration with specific system applications.
If confirmed in the Ubuntu 26.10 release cycle, Myna will place Canonical among the operating system vendors that have been incorporating AI features directly into the desktop environment. For now, however, the public details cited by the source are limited to the app's announcement and its association with the next version of the distribution.
Myna is a local voice-to-text transcription app being prepared by Canonical for Ubuntu 26.10 (codenamed Stonking Stingray). It is designed to perform speech recognition directly on the device without relying on cloud processing.
According to reports, Myna will process voice data locally on the user's device. This approach avoids cloud processing, which is beneficial for handling potentially sensitive audio data securely.
The Myna voice-to-text app is slated for Ubuntu 26.10, a release currently identified by the codename Stonking Stingray.