Kwindla Kramer

Talk to Claude Code (with your voice) from anywhere

by

Here's an MCP server that lets you talk to Claude Code from anywhere you can negotiate a WebRTC connection (or make a phone call):

https://github.com/pipecat-ai/pipecat-mcp-server

I’ve been talking to all the programs I use on my computer as much as I can, and I have a bunch of different hacked-up ways to do that. This is a pretty clean implementation of an MCP server that any harness (like Claude Code) with MCP support should be able to use. This shows both the strengths and weaknesses of MCP in interesting ways, I think.

What I really want is deep, configurable integration of voice into Claude Code (and other programs that I have long-running “conversations” with, with seamless background process management and network transport). And I think that will actually start to be the norm at some point. Voice such a natural interface for so, so many kinds of interactions.

I was telling a friend the other day that our kids will think about keyboards the way I think about punch cards. “Kind of cool that they used to program computers like that.”

Video here: https://x.com/kwindla/status/2015956506118914221

311 views

Add a comment

Replies

Best
shreya chaurasia

This is a great example of MCP being useful when the interface is “live” instead of doc-driven. Curious what parts felt clunky in practice, auth, latency, or session state?

Zypressen

Same curiosity here — especially around session continuity.
If I walk away and come back 10 mins later, does the voice agent remember where we left off? Or is it a fresh context every call?

Rajiv Ayyangar

Interesting - so you can keep talking into a long running claude task…throughout the day, while on the go?

Zypressen

“Our kids will think about keyboards the way I think about punch cards.”
This line hit me hard.
We’re not just building voice interfaces — we’re retiring the idea that computers need to be “typed at.”

Rajiv Ayyangar

From tweet thread:

“ I always have multiple Claudes running, and I often want to check in on them when I'm not in front of a computer.”

Super cool! Thanks for sharing here!

Mohammad Naghavi

have been thinking about something like this for longer now. it makes so much sense. I'm still not sure if those code diffs are really understandable over voice and I don't think keyboard is gonna disappear soonish but this will accelerate our work in many areas by so much.