We are excited to introduce SuperIntern — a real-time, always-on AI meeting assistant that takes notes, finds answers, and turns conversations into action.
## Motivation
Most tools dump notes after the fact. SuperIntern works in-meeting—capturing clean notes in real time, surfacing context on demand, answering questions in the moment, and moving decisions forward before the call ends—so you can stay original while AI handles the busywork.
## What SuperIntern does
SuperIntern sits alongside any meeting and does many jobs at once DURING MEETING:
📝 Live notes & transcripts that are clean, structured, and searchable.
💬 Real-time answers to questions that pop up mid-discussion (facts, docs, past decisions) and suggest follow-ups — action items, owners, and summaries ready to share the moment the call ends.
## More ways SuperIntern accelerates your meetings
🤖 No meeting bot required. The desktop app captures system audio directly, so there’s nothing joining your calls.
🫥 Invisible Mode. Keep SuperIntern private—participants don’t see any SuperIntern windows or prompts you use.
☝️ One-click capture. Start capturing with one click for every meeting—Zoom, Meet, Teams, or in-person.
🗣️ Translation in real-time & dual subtitles. See both the original audio (e.g. Spanish) and the translated text (e.g. English) on screen at the same time — great for learning and for not missing nuance.
🔈 Download the recording after the call. Access and share the full audio recording once the meeting ends.
1️⃣ For non-native speakers in global meetings
2️⃣ For founders, managers & busy execs
3️⃣ For sales, CS & client-facing teams
4️⃣ For product, project & ops teams
5️⃣ For learners & upskilling in real meetings

SuperIntern focuses on the right problem: bringing AI from “after‑the‑fact notes” into the live flow of the meeting. What stands out to me is: No bot joining the call and an invisible desktop recorder, which reduces friction for sensitive or client-facing meetings. Real‑time notes and Q&A (e.g. “What did we just decide?”) that actually change how people run meetings, instead of just adding a summary afterward. Strong value for non‑native speakers with dual subtitles and structured notes, turning real business meetings into reusable learning material. Whether it breaks out will depend on how much better it can make these real‑time workflows compared to built‑in tools from Zoom/Google/Microsoft, and whether it can become indispensable for specific groups like global teams, sales/CS, or language learners—instead of being just “another meeting summary tool.”
SuperIntern focuses on the right problem: bringing AI from “after‑the‑fact notes” into the live flow of the meeting. What stands out to me is: No bot joining the call and an invisible desktop recorder, which reduces friction for sensitive or client-facing meetings. Real‑time notes and Q&A (e.g. “What did we just decide?”) that actually change how people run meetings, instead of just adding a summary afterward. Strong value for non‑native speakers with dual subtitles and structured notes, turning real business meetings into reusable learning material. Whether it breaks out will depend on how much better it can make these real‑time workflows compared to built‑in tools from Zoom/Google/Microsoft, and whether it can become indispensable for specific groups like global teams, sales/CS, or language learners—instead of being just “another meeting summary tool.”
SuperIntern focuses on the right problem: bringing AI from “after‑the‑fact notes” into the live flow of the meeting. What stands out to me is: No bot joining the call and an invisible desktop recorder, which reduces friction for sensitive or client-facing meetings. Real‑time notes and Q&A (e.g. “What did we just decide?”) that actually change how people run meetings, instead of just adding a summary afterward. Strong value for non‑native speakers with dual subtitles and structured notes, turning real business meetings into reusable learning material. Whether it breaks out will depend on how much better it can make these real‑time workflows compared to built‑in tools from Zoom/Google/Microsoft, and whether it can become indispensable for specific groups like global teams, sales/CS, or language learners—instead of being just “another meeting summary tool.”

SuperIntern focuses on the right problem: bringing AI from “after‑the‑fact notes” into the live flow of the meeting. What stands out to me is: No bot joining the call and an invisible desktop recorder, which reduces friction for sensitive or client-facing meetings. Real‑time notes and Q&A (e.g. “What did we just decide?”) that actually change how people run meetings, instead of just adding a summary afterward. Strong value for non‑native speakers with dual subtitles and structured notes, turning real business meetings into reusable learning material. Whether it breaks out will depend on how much better it can make these real‑time workflows compared to built‑in tools from Zoom/Google/Microsoft, and whether it can become indispensable for specific groups like global teams, sales/CS, or language learners—instead of being just “another meeting summary tool.”
SuperIntern focuses on the right problem: bringing AI from “after‑the‑fact notes” into the live flow of the meeting. What stands out to me is: No bot joining the call and an invisible desktop recorder, which reduces friction for sensitive or client-facing meetings. Real‑time notes and Q&A (e.g. “What did we just decide?”) that actually change how people run meetings, instead of just adding a summary afterward. Strong value for non‑native speakers with dual subtitles and structured notes, turning real business meetings into reusable learning material. Whether it breaks out will depend on how much better it can make these real‑time workflows compared to built‑in tools from Zoom/Google/Microsoft, and whether it can become indispensable for specific groups like global teams, sales/CS, or language learners—instead of being just “another meeting summary tool.”
SuperIntern focuses on the right problem: bringing AI from “after‑the‑fact notes” into the live flow of the meeting. What stands out to me is: No bot joining the call and an invisible desktop recorder, which reduces friction for sensitive or client-facing meetings. Real‑time notes and Q&A (e.g. “What did we just decide?”) that actually change how people run meetings, instead of just adding a summary afterward. Strong value for non‑native speakers with dual subtitles and structured notes, turning real business meetings into reusable learning material. Whether it breaks out will depend on how much better it can make these real‑time workflows compared to built‑in tools from Zoom/Google/Microsoft, and whether it can become indispensable for specific groups like global teams, sales/CS, or language learners—instead of being just “another meeting summary tool.”
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