Read faster without losing control.

AutoByte helps you raise reading speed while keeping focus, visual control and recall measurable after every session.

Peak WPM 840
Reading volume 14,432
Recall control 29%
Sessions 62
Cognitive tools

Explore the AutoByte training tools.

Start with focused speed reading and peripheral awareness. Memory, recall and focus tools can connect to the same dashboard later.

Open dashboard
Reading performance

Speed Reader

RSVP-style reading with ORP focus, adaptive pacing, stable range analytics and recall-aware training.

Adaptive paceRecall checksStable range
Open Speed Reader
Visual field training

Peripheral Trainer

Train peripheral recognition with letters, numbers, symbols, words and all directions including diagonals.

All directionsSymbols & wordsFocus control
Open Peripheral Trainer
How AutoByte works

A cleaner way to train reading speed, focus and recall.

Most people try to read faster by forcing their eyes to move faster. AutoByte takes a more useful approach: it gives your brain a repeatable training loop that combines controlled pacing, visual focus, peripheral awareness and simple recall checks.

01

Train with a clear target

Choose a tool, set the difficulty and start a focused session. Speed Reader helps you reduce wandering eyes and build pacing control. Peripheral Trainer helps you keep a stable center while recognizing information around it.

02

Keep attention centered

The interface removes distractions so your eyes, attention and working memory can stay locked into the exercise instead of fighting the page.

03

Measure the session

Track useful training signals like WPM, accuracy, time and progress so practice feels concrete instead of random.

Why it matters

Better reading is not just speed. It is attention control.

AutoByte is built for people who read, study, research, write, code or learn online and want a sharper daily training habit. The goal is not hype. The goal is a calmer, faster and more repeatable way to process information.

Read with less drag

Speed Reader helps you practice smoother pacing and reduce the constant start-stop feeling that makes digital reading exhausting.

Build wider awareness

Peripheral exercises train you to hold a central focus point while recognizing letters, words, numbers and symbols around it.

Support better recall

Reading faster is only useful if you remember what mattered. AutoByte is designed to connect speed, attention and recall into one training system.

Practice in minutes

Short sessions make it easier to stay consistent. Open a tool, run a focused drill and come back tomorrow with a clear baseline.

Daily routine

A simple 10-minute cognitive warmup.

Use AutoByte before deep work, study sessions or research blocks. Start with speed, reset your focus, then add peripheral awareness so your reading feels less cramped.

2 min Warm up with comfortable WPM
4 min Push pace while keeping comprehension calm
3 min Train peripheral recognition around center focus
1 min Review progress and repeat tomorrow
Built for high-volume readers

Use it before the work that demands a clear mind.

AutoByte works best when it becomes the short practice layer before the information-heavy parts of your day.

Students

Warm up before textbooks, lectures, notes and exam prep.

Founders & operators

Move through research, documents and decisions with less friction.

Developers

Train focus before documentation, specs, code reviews and technical writing.

Knowledge workers

Build a calmer routine around reading, recall and attention stamina.

Pricing

Start free. Build the habit first.

The free tools are designed to help you experience the training loop immediately. Advanced analytics, more drills and deeper progress systems can be added later without changing the clean workflow.

Start Free Speed Reader
FAQ

Questions before you start?

Is AutoByte a medical tool?

No. AutoByte is a cognitive training interface for reading flow, attention and visual awareness. It does not diagnose, treat or claim medical outcomes.

How often should I train?

Short consistent sessions are better than long random sessions. Start with 5–10 minutes a day and increase only when the practice still feels controlled.

Should I push WPM as high as possible?

Not at first. Build a stable range where speed and comprehension both feel under control, then increase gradually.

Why combine speed reading and peripheral training?

They train different parts of the same experience: pacing, visual attention, focus stability and recognition under pressure.

Start now

Give your brain a cleaner reading interface.

Open the free Speed Reader, run one calm session and see how it feels to train with less noise and more control.