Advantages 👍
- - Instant summaries
- - Action item tracking
- - Natural language interface
- - Lightweight overlay
- - Searchable archive
Drawbacks 👎
- Accent sensitivity: Colleagues with thicker regional accents experienced occasional transcription hiccups that required manual corrections.
-
- Mobile gap: There is no Android or iOS client, so phone conferences still require manual notes.
-
- Limited free tier: After ten meetings the service locks advanced exports behind a paid plan; heavy users will reach that ceiling fast.
-
- Privacy concerns raised by finance team: Recording must be disabled for confidential discussions, adding an extra layer of admin work.
-
- Minor lag on older laptops: A colleague running a 2017 MacBook Air reported CPU spikes when simultaneous screen sharing took place.
timeOS is a browser and calendar extension that captures, distils, and shares meeting notes automatically.
How to use timeOS
- Install the extension from the official site and connect Google or Outlook calendars.
- Grant microphone permission so the assistant can listen during video calls.
- Join a call; a small overlay will confirm that the recorder is active.
- When the session ends, open the pop-up summary, tag action items, and send them to Slack or email with one click.
- Visit the dashboard to search past conversations, edit highlights, and export notes to Notion or Docs.
What stood out during our week with timeOS
Advantages
- Instant summaries: Every Zoom and Meet session produced a tidy paragraph and bullet list within seconds, saving me from frantic note-taking.
- Action item tracking: The tool autocompletes tasks in a checklist format, which slipped neatly into my existing Trello board.
- Natural language interface: I could ask, “Send the key points from Monday’s stand-up to the marketing channel,” and it handled the routing flawlessly.
- Lightweight overlay: The on-screen controls stayed out of the way, yet remained easy to reach when pausing recording.
- Searchable archive: Typing a keyword in the dashboard surfaced the exact sentence I needed, even from calls held a month ago.
Drawbacks
- Accent sensitivity: Colleagues with thicker regional accents experienced occasional transcription hiccups that required manual corrections.
- Mobile gap: There is no Android or iOS client, so phone conferences still require manual notes.
- Limited free tier: After ten meetings the service locks advanced exports behind a paid plan; heavy users will reach that ceiling fast.
- Privacy concerns raised by finance team: Recording must be disabled for confidential discussions, adding an extra layer of admin work.
- Minor lag on older laptops: A colleague running a 2017 MacBook Air reported CPU spikes when simultaneous screen sharing took place.
After five days, my inbox contained clearer follow-ups, stand-ups ran shorter, and missed tasks dropped sharply; those benefits outweighed the quirks, so I kept the subscription and look forward to a mobile app that fills the remaining gap.