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For podcasters

Interview transcripts, straight from your Mac.

You already record interviews properly. What's missing is a searchable transcript that knows who said what — without your material having to take a trip through the cloud first.

Concrete use cases
01 / 03

Show notes in minutes

Pull quotes, timestamps, and topic blocks straight from the transcript. There's no server queue to wait on — the moment you stop recording, you can start working the episode.

02 / 03

Remote interviews, speakers kept apart

Recording on Riverside or Squadcast? You already have clean separate tracks. Tyll still tells the speakers apart even on the mixed-down file — and for local interviews through Tyll Audio, the tracks stay separate from the start.

03 / 03

Search across your whole show

Every episode adds to your transcript library, right there on your Mac. Tyll's search finds a quote across all of them — exactly what you want when you're trying to remember who said what, and when.

Recording workflows Tyll fits into

Your Mac, straight into Tyll. Record with your microphone in Tyll, and when you stop, it tells you who was speaking. Great for solo episodes or on-site interviews.

Riverside or Squadcast, then into Tyll. Bring the finished audio into Tyll and get a transcript that keeps the speakers apart. Your original multi-track recording stays untouched.

Remote interview over Zoom or Meet. Pick “Tyll Audio” as both your microphone and your speaker in the meeting tool. Tyll gets both sides as separate tracks — your voice and your guest’s — and gives you a clean transcript with each speaker labeled.

The show-notes flow

  1. Record. A minute or two after you stop, your transcript is ready.
  2. Skim it and copy the quotes you want, with their timestamps.
  3. Export the passages you need as Markdown.
  4. Drop them into your show-notes tool — Notion, Obsidian, plain Markdown.

What Tyll deliberately leaves out

  • No automatic “best moments” quote picking
  • No audio editing — that stays in Logic, Hindenburg, or Audacity
  • No direct hookups to hosting platforms

“My podcast material shouldn't see a cloud before I've even worked on it. Tyll closes exactly that gap.”

— Expected use case from the target audience