FAQ
Questions.
The conversation is the work. You run on conversations: the 1:1 with your EM, the recruiting coffee, the investor walk. Every decision, every commitment, every "I'll take care of that by Friday" starts in spoken words. And when the conversation ends, most of it disappears.
The AI you pay for today operates on artifacts, like the Zoom transcript, the calendar invite, or the doc someone wrote up after. None of it sees the conversation itself. Audria does.
Audria listens to your in-person conversations, organizes them into searchable memories, and drafts the actions that come out of each one (emails, Slack messages, tickets, calendar events) in the tools you already use.
Audria is built and optimized for English speaking teams in the US, and it currently works in English only. More languages and regions are on the way.
Audria is on iPhone today. The Mac app is coming very soon, and Audria's wearable arrives later. You can start with just the iPhone already in your pocket.
No. Audria is meant for in-person conversations at the office. Online meetings will be supported very soon with the Mac app.
No. The iPhone and Mac apps are standalone products. The wearable will be a new way to interact with Audria, with much higher quality voice input, but you will never need it to use Audria.
Audria listens while you are at work, because that is exactly what makes it useful: it is a productivity tool for your office conversations. You stay in control the whole time. Pausing takes one tap, and it is just as easy to delete parts of a conversation you would rather keep off the record.
You are responsible for using Audria lawfully. Recording laws vary by state, and in many states everyone in a conversation must consent, so your team members and anyone else you record should know about Audria.
Teams typically handle this by letting everyone know up front: when Audria is introduced at the office, and when someone new joins the team.
Yes. You can delete parts of a conversation, entire conversations, or your whole account with all of its data, at any time, right from the app.
Audria connects to Gmail, Slack, Google Calendar, Linear, Jira, Notion, Google Docs, Google Drive, Confluence, and Google Contacts. It also works with Apple Contacts and Apple Reminders, and it hands off to Claude and ChatGPT with your context attached.
No. Audria drafts your emails, Slack messages, tickets, and calendar events with the context already filled in. You review, edit if you want, and send. Nothing goes out without you.
When you want to go deeper on something from your day, Audria packages the relevant context from your conversations, along with recommended prompts, and takes you straight into Claude or ChatGPT. You get better answers without typing out the whole backstory.
You will not notice battery drain beyond normal use. Audria's pipeline is highly optimized and runs on the iPhone's Neural Engine, the chip built for exactly this kind of work.
Yes. Audria is valuable on its own from day one: your conversations captured, your actions drafted, your context carried into your AI. It becomes even more valuable when your teammates use it too, because the things people owe each other stop slipping through the cracks.
AI notetakers live inside scheduled meetings. They join your calls, and their idea of a person is a name on a calendar invite. But most of the conversations that move work forward never make it to a calendar: the hallway decision, the desk-side request, the quick sync over coffee. Audria captures those.
Wearable recorders give you a transcript with anonymous speaker labels. Audria turns voices into real people. It links each person to who they are in your tools, builds a page for them that accumulates across every conversation, and keeps track of what you owe them and what they owe you.
And where both stop at notes, Audria drafts the actual follow-through: the email, the Slack message, the ticket, ready for your review in the tools you already use.
Audria is currently in closed beta, so it is free to use while we refine it with early users. Paid pricing will be announced when we open up more broadly.