▲ 3 r/Notion

Is there an AI that can automatically turn recorded lectures into notes on the lecture slides?

I'm looking for a tool that can take a recorded lecture (audio/video) together with the PowerPoint slides and automatically add the lecturer's explanations to the correct slide.

I don't just want a transcript or a summary, I want each slide to contain everything the lecturer said while that slide was being presented.

It would also be great if it handled medical terminology accurately.

Does anything like this exist, or what's the closest option you've found?

reddit.com
u/m7eem — 10 hours ago

Is there an AI that can automatically turn recorded lectures into notes on the lecture slides?

I'm looking for a tool that can take a recorded lecture (audio/video) together with the PowerPoint slides and automatically add the lecturer's explanations to the correct slide.

I don't just want a transcript or a summary, I want each slide to contain everything the lecturer said while that slide was being presented.

It would also be great if it handled medical terminology accurately.

Does anything like this exist, or what's the closest option you've found?

reddit.com
u/m7eem — 11 hours ago
▲ 1 r/AnkiAi

Other AI card generators are quietly skipping half your lecture. Here's what I built instead.

Tested a few AI Anki tools before building my own. The pattern I kept seeing: upload a dense pharmacology or pathology lecture, get back cards that feel complete — but when you go back to the source, huge chunks were never touched.

That's actually worse than not using AI at all, because you don't know what you're missing.

Ankit is built around full-file coverage. The backend processes every part of your upload — not just the "important" sections the AI decides to focus on. It's a custom pipeline, not a wrapper around a chat prompt.

Would love to see it stress-tested on your actual lecture material. Link in comments.

https://preview.redd.it/nvoo00rhixzg1.png?width=1906&format=png&auto=webp&s=a641b3bda58a6c663c9ea751854b200c6241fcb4

reddit.com
u/m7eem — 2 months ago
▲ 0 r/Anki

If you've tried AI card generators before, you've probably noticed this: you upload a 60-slide lecture and get cards for maybe 30 of them. The AI summarizes and picks "important" bits — which means you have blind spots you don't even know about.

https://preview.redd.it/c6dtm09wywzg1.png?width=1918&format=png&auto=webp&s=3d3ddd7d77951c49cdf4b5494eb7bba3c9cccb46

I built Ankit specifically to fix that. The system processes the entire file — every slide, every paragraph — not just the highlights. It's built on a custom pipeline (not just a plain AI prompt) that ensures full coverage before generating cards.

Upload the same lecture you've used with other tools and compare the output. The difference is usually obvious.

Link in comments — genuinely curious how it holds up against your material.

reddit.com
u/m7eem — 2 months ago