5 comments

  • ByteAtATime 1 day ago
    One of the reasons people take notes is that you’re processing the information while taking the notes. This is removing that important step, and I would argue it means these notes are less effective than manually taking them in the first place
    • pranav_harshan 1 day ago
      I absolutely agree, taking notes yourself is a key part of learning. This isn’t trying to replace that. It’s more of a backup for when lectures are long, fast-paced, or you just can’t stay fully engaged the whole time.

      The idea is to support the process — help with review, fill in gaps, and make it easier to revisit and actually use what was said in class.

  • arbus5672 1 day ago
    Maybe run this through one of the open university lectures available on YouTube and show what the results it produces look like?

    This should give a clear idea of the quality of the output and an easy way to see before buying.

    We have internal technical presentations at my company and this could be useful for those as well, not just for university students

    • pranav_harshan 1 day ago
      Yeah I will be soon adding a sample results in the home page along with an onboarding screen. As you said it will help the user get an clear idea about the product.

      Also you can try out the product for free when you signup. Can we connect so I could get few insights from your use case.

  • sfc32 2 days ago
    Is it possible to see an example without signing up?
    • pranav_harshan 1 day ago
      Working on that! I’ll drop a sample notes, mind map + the original transcript on the homepage soon so you can preview before signing up.

      Thanks for the response

  • seany62 2 days ago
    Great idea! Will it highlight parts where the professor says something like "this is important and will be on the exam...". All of the information on the exam (which dictates the majority of your score in the class at most US universities) must be conveyed to the student one way or the other (worksheets, lectures. etc.). A cool runoff would be an "AI Exam Prep" which guessed what would be on the exam, based on previous exams and where the info came from
    • pranav_harshan 2 days ago
      Great point! Right now it doesn’t flag “this will be on the exam” moments, but I’ve been thinking about it. Since we have the full transcript, detecting key phrases like that is definitely possible.

      Flashcards are on the way too — and tying them to “likely exam content” would be super useful. Appreciate the idea!

      • dansoto 2 days ago
        To take this further, allowing the user to define hot items or subjects might be better. For example, history tests often ask questions about when or where an event happened. Imagine if we could request that we want a list of dates and associated events.
        • pranav_harshan 1 day ago
          That makes sense, will consider this. Thanks for the feedback
  • dansoto 2 days ago
    This looks nifty. There is some confusion regarding the "Pro" plan.

    * 20 hours of recording time

    Is that 20 total hours for the month or one transcribing session?

    • pranav_harshan 1 day ago
      Ah yeah, should’ve been clearer — it’s 20 hours per month on the Pro plan. I’ll clean that up on the site.

      Thanks for catching it.