·Feature

YouTube transcript generator

The transcript is the raw material behind captions, show notes, and repurposed text. FrameOS generates an accurate, timestamped transcript from a YouTube link or an uploaded video, so you have the text to caption from, edit, or turn into other formats.

Transcribe from a link or an upload

Paste a YouTube URL or upload a file, and FrameOS transcribes the audio into timestamped text. The transcript is the same one that drives caption generation and clip finding, so it's grounded in what was actually said.

Timestamped and editable

Every line carries its timestamp, so you can jump to a moment or line up the text with the video. The transcript is editable — fix a misheard name or a technical term once, and the correction flows into the captions and any text you repurpose from it.

The starting point for repurposing

A transcript is the input for show notes, a blog draft, chapter markers, and social copy. FrameOS uses the transcript to generate those formats, so transcribing a video is the first step toward turning it into a week of text and clips — not a dead-end text file.

Accurate enough to caption from

A transcript is only useful if it's accurate. Because FrameOS's captions are generated from the same transcript, the text is held to caption-grade accuracy — and stays editable so you can correct anything the model missed before it becomes a subtitle.

Transcript workflow

  • Transcribe from a YouTube link or an upload.
  • Timestamped, editable text.
  • Feeds captions, show notes, chapters, and blog drafts.
  • Correct once — the fix flows to captions and repurposed text.

FAQ

Can FrameOS generate a transcript from a YouTube video?

Yes — paste a YouTube link or upload a file, and it produces an accurate, timestamped transcript you can edit and repurpose.

Is the transcript timestamped?

Yes. Each line carries a timestamp, so you can align the text with the video or jump to a moment.

What can I do with the transcript?

Caption from it, edit it, or repurpose it into show notes, chapters, a blog draft, or social copy — all generated from the same transcript.

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