Your call archive as a searchable library. Ask any question, jump to the exact second.

Upload Zoom, Google Meet, Microsoft Teams, and Loom recordings, or capture meetings live on a Mac. Every call joins one searchable library. Ask 'what did the prospect say about pricing?' from the web, ChatGPT, or Claude. Get cited answers with timestamps you can share back to your team.

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Real output from a real transcription

Browse chapters, ask questions, and explore search results from an actual transcript.

44 Harsh Truths About The Game Of Life - Naval Ravikant (4K)
Chris Williamson
Contents
8 chapters · 513 sections
1Happiness Versus Success: Philosophical Reflections on Contentment, Desire, and Motivation
2Optimizing Sleep: Smart Temperature Regulation and the Foundations of Self-Esteem
3Decisive Action and Iterative Practice: Keys to Optimal Choices and Mastery
4Wealth Management: From Materialism to Value Creation and Fair Compensation
5Evaluating LLMs: Capabilities, Limitations, and Their Role in AI's Evolving Landscape
6Pathogens, Evolution, and Knowledge: How Humans Adapt and Defend
7Agency, Power, and the Individual: From Child Development to Cultural Conflict
8Unseen Trends: Media Oversights, Medical Limitations, and the Primitive State of Modern Biology
Q&A preview
Answer
Naval explains two distinct paths to happiness using the story of Alexander and Diogenes. The first path is through success—conquering the world, satisfying material needs, and getting what you want. The second path, exemplified by Diogenes living in a barrel, is simply not wanting in the first place. As Socrates said when shown luxuries: 'How many things there are in this world that I do not want.' Naval suggests not wanting something is as good as having it—both paths lead to the same destination of contentment [00:38–01:10]. He's not sure which path is more valid, noting it depends on how you define success [01:10–01:25].

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Summaries are useful until someone asks 'where exactly did they say that?'

  • A polished recap can't tell you the exact wording a prospect used
  • Rewatching a 60-minute call to verify one detail wastes more time than the call itself
  • Meeting notes live and die in one tool. No search across your archive, no cited evidence
  • Single-engine tools degrade on multilingual calls and accented English

What you get with searchable call transcripts

One searchable library across every call

Every recording joins one library. Find where a competitor, an objection, a pricing question, or a next step came up across your whole archive.

Cited Q&A on any call or across all of them

Ask 'what did the prospect say about competitor X?' and get a cited answer with the exact second. Click the citation to verify in playback.

Key takeaways and chapters

Auto-generated summary, takeaways, and a chapter spine for long calls. Copy as markdown into Notion, Slack, or your CRM.

Speaker identification on multi-speaker calls

Who said what, labeled automatically. Essential for demos, interviews, and deal-team conversations.

Works in any language, automatically

67 languages with measured accuracy per language. Multilingual sales teams and global customer interviews handled without a model-selection chore.

Notes with evidence

Share back notes that link to the exact moment in the recording. Handoffs, deal reviews, and coaching loops backed by the source.

Capture meetings on macOS without virtual drivers

The macOS app uses Apple's native AudioTap on macOS 14.2+ to capture system audio with no SCK prompt, no BlackHole, and no extra software. Sign in once, hit record, get a transcript in your library.

What people use this for

  • Upload Zoom, Google Meet, and Microsoft Teams recordings into a searchable archive
  • Capture live meetings on Mac (macOS 14.2+) using AudioTap, no virtual drivers required
  • Ask 'what did the prospect say about competitor X?' with cited answers
  • Build a library of every customer interview and surface recurring themes
  • Coach reps by jumping to the exact moment an objection came up
  • Share deal-review notes backed by timestamped evidence
  • Pull verbatim quotes for proposals, case studies, and internal reports
  • Ask follow-up questions about a deal from the ChatGPT GPT or Claude Connector

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

Not yet via a meeting bot. The macOS desktop app captures the meeting locally using Apple's native AudioTap on macOS 14.2 and up, no virtual drivers required. Hit record before the call, get a transcript in your library when it ends. A native meeting-join bot is on the roadmap.

Yes. Add the public ChatGPT GPT or the Claude Custom Connector to query your call archive from chat. Same wallet, same per-minute pricing, no extra account.

Yes. Library-wide search and Q&A spans every transcript in the account. Find where a competitor, objection, pricing question, or commitment came up across your full archive.

Yes. 67 languages with measured accuracy per language. The right speech-to-text engine is picked per recording, so a Spanish-English mixed call and an English demo don't share a one-size-fits-all model.

Not yet. Today the product is single-user with pay-as-you-go pricing. A team plan with shared workspace, admin, and SSO is on the roadmap once we hit the request threshold. Ask us if you'd use it.

Pay-per-minute, no per-seat fees and no monthly minimums. Friendlier for variable-volume teams than seat-based subscriptions. Free credits on signup with no card required.

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