·Use case

Clips from Riverside recordings

Riverside captures clean, separate-track recordings of remote conversations. FrameOS takes that high-quality long-form and turns each episode into short, captioned vertical clips.

Made for remote two-person recordings

Riverside is built for remote interviews and podcasts. FrameOS is built for what comes next — finding the self-contained moments in that conversation and lifting them into standalone clips ranked by hook strength.

Reframe the two-shot to follow the speaker

A remote recording usually shows two people; a center crop loses whoever isn't talking. FrameOS tracks the active speaker so the vertical crop moves between host and guest like a human editor.

Captions for sound-off feeds

Clips get watched on mute. Word-by-word captions, editable so a guest's name or a term is correct, are burned in to play on every platform.

From a clean recording to a clip batch

Because the source is high quality, the clips are too — one Riverside episode becomes several vertical posts without re-recording or re-editing the whole thing.

Riverside workflow

  • Find standalone moments in the conversation.
  • Follow the active speaker in a two-shot.
  • Editable, burned-in captions for muted feeds.
  • Export vertical clips for social platforms.

FAQ

Can FrameOS make clips from a Riverside recording?

Yes. Bring the recording in and FrameOS finds moments, reframes the two-person shot to follow the speaker, and captions each clip for short-form.

Is FrameOS a Riverside replacement?

No — they pair well. Riverside records the conversation; FrameOS turns that recording into short vertical clips. See the FrameOS vs Riverside comparison for where each fits.

Does it handle remote interviews with two feeds?

Yes. Active-speaker tracking is designed for two-person layouts, keeping the current talker framed as the conversation moves.

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