Designed to be seen
The first AI recorder with a visible recording cue. It turns gently while listening, so everyone in the room knows when capture is on.
The local context device for builders. Captures Zoom/Teams calls and desk discussions offline for Claude, Codex, and Cursor.
★★★★★7 reviewsThe first AI recorder with a visible recording cue. It turns gently while listening, so everyone in the room knows when capture is on.
Transcription, speaker recognition, and summaries run locally on your computer. No cloud processing. No voice data leaving your device.
Capture, transcribe, and organize as much as you want. No monthly fees, no quotas, and no usage meters standing in your way.








Connect instantly with Claude, Codex, Cursor, MCP clients, and your own workflows. One recorder, every AI stack.
Every recording becomes structured knowledge. Automatically organize notes, decisions, and tasks so your AI agents can keep working after the meeting ends.
A dedicated AI chip removes background noise in real time and identifies who’s speaking, so every conversation stays easy to follow.
C1 never takes over your microphone or headphones. Whether you’re on calls or in meetings, it records independently so nothing gets in the way.
Schedule automatic start/stop windows or trigger it by hand. With up to 30 hours of battery life, C1 is always prepared for your next conversation.

Local plain-text files
Raw audio recordings
Cloud video call bots
| Question | OneMira C1 | Voice recorders | Meeting AI apps |
|---|---|---|---|
| What it hears | In-person talk at your desk | Only what you talk into it | Only your video calls |
| Who makes sense of it | The AI you already use | You, by re-listening | Their built-in bot |
| Where it lives | Plain files on your computer | Raw audio on the device | Uploaded to their cloud |
| To get going | Just talk — it’s already on | Press record every time | Invite a bot to each call |
| Ongoing cost | No subscription | Often a subscription | Monthly subscription |
A local context device. It captures what is said at your desk, turns it into plain-text notes on your own computer, and makes them available to your own AI over MCP. It is not a cloud note-taker—no transcripts leave your machine. Your AI does the thinking; C1 just hands it the spoken context it never had.
Summaries, recaps, mind maps—every recorder does those. The difference is what happens next. They stop at their own built-in summarizer; C1 hands the conversation to your own agent—Claude, Codex, Cursor—which takes it much further: a real spec, a working doc, a ticket, shipped code. And it is all 100% local, with no subscription and no quota.
Everything stays on your own computer as plain-text files. Speech recognition, transcription, and speaker labeling all run locally, and the audio is deleted after it syncs. Nothing is uploaded—and because there is no shared cloud, your conversation can never end up on someone else's account.
No. C1 has no Wi-Fi—it connects to your computer over Bluetooth or USB-C, and all processing is offline. The only time the internet is involved is when your own AI tools use it.
OneMira C1 works natively with Claude Desktop, Claude Code, Codex, Cursor, and other MCP-compatible or local-file/CLI-based AI tools. Additionally, its local transcription engine supports auto-detection and accurate transcription of English, Mandarin, and major Chinese dialects (like Cantonese and Sichuanese) 100% offline directly on your own machine.
It pulls it from C1 over MCP. Ask your agent in plain language—it finds and calls the right command and works from the context C1 has stored. C1 is the store; your agent does the work.
No. C1 is a passive store—it never reaches into your repo. Your agent, or a scheduled loop you set up, reads from C1, and you decide what gets written into your AGENTS.md, rules, or docs.
No. Just tell your agent what you want in plain language; it discovers and calls the right command on its own. Nothing to memorize.
We built C1 because our best product and architecture decisions were happening at the desk, then getting lost before Claude or Codex could use them. The strongest moment is seeing a messy conversation become local Context an AI can continue from.
The useful artifact is not the recording. It is the handoff: decisions, constraints, open questions, and next prompts that can go straight into Claude, Codex, or Cursor without reconstructing the whole conversation from memory.
C1 is not trying to be the simplest voice memo app. Pairing the device, running the desktop helper, and initializing local Context is for people who already use AI tools for real work every day.
The important promise is control. The core flow should not require sending raw audio into another cloud workspace, and the long-term artifact should be editable local text Context rather than an archive of sensitive recordings.