This AI keyboard can write your next email with the push of just one button; its creator says it could revolutionize workplaces
October 28, 2025 | Nikki Overfelt Chifalu
Hardware — not just software — should be at the forefront of the AI’s future, Jerry Hsu shared.
After the successful release of its GPT-powered AI mouse, Jethro V1, in late 2024, Overland Park-based Virtusx — which is revolutionizing workplaces through integrating hardware and software to make AI-driving products more accessible and user-friendly — has launched a Kickstarter campaign for the world’s first AI mechanical keyboard, Phronesis.
Click here to check out the Phronesis crowdfunding campaign.
“Obviously, the software aspect is a really, really heavy piece of the AI industry right now,” said Hsu, CEO of Virtusz. “But I know that OpenAI recently acquired the previous Apple designer to come up with AI hardware that will power your software, too. And that’s a vision that our company wants to go toward. We built a device — hardware — that people will use every single day.”
In just two days, Virtusx hit its $10,000 goal on Kickstarter for Phronesis, which has a built-in AI chip and microphone that is designed to type, translate, and summarize using the user’s voice.
With weeks to go until the campaign ends in early November, the startup has already raised just more than $48,000 with about 285 backers. Virtusx plans to go into full production on the keyboard in late November and to ship out to backers in late December or early January, Hsu said. It will eventually be available on Amazon (just as the Jethro V1 mouse is now).
“We are really excited to launch this product,” Hsu said, noting the Virtusx team also fine-tuned its software for the new product.
“AI is booming right now,” he added. “A lot of softwares have their strength on doing a specific task. But there hasn’t been a software that combines everything together and makes the (user interface) very intuitive for the user.”
Features beneath the keys
What makes Phronesis different: a built-in AI chip and a dedicated AI switch that lets the user shift between normal typing and AI mode with a single press, according to Virtusx. Once in AI mode, users can instantly launch voice typing, translation, meeting summaries, image generation, and more, all directly from the keyboard.
“For example, let’s say you are working on a project,” Hsu explained, “and all of a sudden you have a question that you want to ask. All you have to do is press a key and then just say the question. Once you’re done speaking, release the key, and it will type the prompt into our built-in software and it will just instantly give you an idea.”
The keyboard also had built-in dedicated hotkeys to launch tools, he continued.
“If you want to create a PowerPoint, you can click the button and it will just jump into that specific window for you,” Hsu explained. “If you want to reply to emails, you hit a button and then it will just pop up a window for you instantly. You don’t have to go to different pages.”
The Virtusx V-AI software — which will soon be available offline — also allows more privacy to protect the user, he noted.
“We just think that for our users who use AI in regular life, they need a more secure place to use it,” Hsu said. “That’s why, when we built this hardware and software, most of your data is going to be stored on your hardware or device, instead of synching to the cloud, if you don’t permit it. AI is growing really fast, but it also raises a lot of security concerns.”
Two-way feedback
Hsu’s team at Virtusx got the idea for the AI keyboard from the response to the AI mouse and its successful Kickstarter campaign.
“We got a lot of feedback saying that they wanted it in a keyboard format because not everyone is so into using a mouse,” the founder said.
That’s the benefit of using a crowdfunding platform, Hsu noted. It provides connection to a community that cares about the product before it’s launched, leading them to release the keyboard on Kickstarter, as well.
“We can still modify it,” he added, “so that when people receive the product, they will be satisfied.”
The next phase, Hsu shared, involves focusing on improving the software in the Virtusx ecosystem by expanding to a mobile version, allowing the user to do things like record meetings, ask chatbot questions, and translate languages in real time.
“You can open the software on mobile and then all of your data — or everything that you’ve done but you couldn’t finish — you can take it with you on your phone and then start working on it there,” he explained.
Click here to see how a community of Virtusx users is using its products.

2025 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Brick by brick: How used LEGOs are making innovation more tangible for KC kids in need
Solopreneur Rhonda Jolyean Hale believes that all children deserve access to play — no matter their circumstances. As the Kansas City ambassador for the Pass the Bricks initiative, she’s working to build that reality by giving new life to donated LEGO bricks. “We take gently used LEGO bricks — not the stuff the dog chews…
Novel Capital teams with Crux KC to offer growth-focused marketing to early-stage tech companies
An exclusive partnership between two Kansas City-based innovators is expected to help remove a traditional financial hurdle to business growth, said Ethan Whitehill, president and chief strategy officer for the KC Chamber-lauded marketing firm Crux KC. The collaboration between Crux and Overland Park-headquartered capital provider Novel Capital is expected to offer B2B SaaS and tech…
Neighborhood smart cans help Kansas Citians save the planet from their kitchens
Newly introduced composting technology is already turning new ground in Kansas City, Kristan Chamberlain said, with more solar-powered compost cans arriving later this spring across the metro’s urban landscape. Her social venture, KC Can Compost, installed three of the devices in October — free to use for KCMO residents wanting to deposit their soil-making food…




