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Eric
Eric

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The Video I Kept Avoiding

I had this one video sitting on my desktop for days.
Not a polished video. Not something I was excited to edit. Just one of those long recordings where I knew there was probably something useful inside, but every time I opened it, the timeline looked like a threat.

So I did what every reasonable person does: I ignored it.
The annoying part was that I did not need the video itself. I needed the words. There were a few ideas, a couple of lines I wanted to reuse, and maybe one section that could turn into a note or post later. But finding those parts meant scrubbing through the whole thing, guessing from the waveform, stopping every few seconds, and slowly losing interest in my own material.
That little frustration is one of the reasons I started building NeatScribe.

At first, I thought of it as a simple transcription tool. Upload a file, get the text, move on. But the more I used it myself, the clearer the real problem became: recordings are useful, but they are hard to enter. Text is the doorway.

So I built a video to text workflow into NeatScribe for exactly this kind of moment. Not for perfect studio content. For the messy files people actually have: product demos, calls, lectures, interviews, screen recordings, half-forgotten ideas.

The transcript does not magically make the video better.
It just makes the video usable.

And honestly, that is the part I care about most. I do not want every recording to become “content.” I just want the useful parts to stop being trapped in the timeline.

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