iOS beta for learning-heavy audio

Memory is not storage. It is retrieval.

Audelo turns long recordings into notes, questions, cards, and source moments you can revisit.

What would you record first?

Audelo iOS app mockup showing recording, notes, review cards, and questions.

Recording should not create a larger archive. It should create a better way back.

Most people record important sessions because they do not want to miss anything. The problem is that raw audio is hard to return to. A one-hour lecture becomes a file, a transcript becomes a wall of text, and a summary loses the moment where the idea came from. Audelo is designed around retrieval: every recording should leave behind smaller handles for memory.

Four rules guide the product.

Capture without interrupting attention

The app should let you stay inside the class, training, or conversation instead of managing the tool.

Keep ideas tied to their source

Notes are more useful when they point back to the exact audio moment that produced them.

Turn listening into retrieval practice

Questions and cards help you test what you remember, not just admire a clean summary.

Make review lighter than replay

The goal is not to replay an entire recording. The goal is to find the few parts worth returning to.

One session becomes a study surface.

Audelo starts as a recorder, then organizes the session into views that match how people actually come back to knowledge.

Source 12:08 to 18:42

Value-based pricing

The instructor contrasts cost-plus pricing with customer value and explains why packaging should begin with the buyer's desired outcome.

  • Define the segment before setting price.
  • Use willingness-to-pay interviews to test ranges.
  • Keep discount rules easy to explain.

Review card

What is value-based pricing?

A pricing approach where the price is anchored to perceived customer value rather than only production cost.

Due today Source 12:08 Marketing strategy

Practice question

Which signal best supports a value-based price?

Less forgotten audio. More useful recall.

Before

Recordings sit in a folder with vague titles, long durations, and no clear next action.

After

Each session has notes, cards, questions, and moments you can search or replay directly.

Why it matters

You spend less time hunting through files and more time reviewing the ideas that changed your understanding.

People who learn from spoken knowledge.

Students

Turn lectures into definitions, examples, review cards, and exam-style questions.

Professionals

Capture onboarding, workshops, sales training, product deep dives, and expert sessions.

Language learners

Save listening practice, phrases, vocabulary, and source audio for repeated review.

Early users shape the memory loop.

The beta is not only early access. It is where we decide which review workflows, recording limits, and pricing model are worth building around.

Free private beta access

Try the iOS app before public release while the core recording and review loop is being tuned.

Founding-user pricing

Early users will get a better path into paid plans when usage-based limits are introduced.

Direct product influence

Your recordings and feedback help decide whether notes, cards, questions, or search should lead the product.

What we are testing now.

Is Audelo only for students?

No. Students are the clearest first audience, but the broader category is learning-heavy audio.

Is this a meeting recorder?

Not as the main wedge. Meeting tools optimize for decisions. Audelo optimizes for review and memory.

Will it be free?

The private beta is free. Paid plans will likely depend on monthly recording hours and processing usage.