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Sona User Guide

A product-shaped entry point to the Sona docs, with the shortest paths for setup, live capture, file import, editing, optional AI steps, workspace organization, export, extended capabilities, and help.

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Pick the shortest path to your first useful result.

Most people only need one or two pages to get moving. Start with the path that matches what you are doing right now.

Everything Inside

The full docs set, organized by the actual Sona workflow.

Use the overview when you are new, then move into setup, transcript creation, editing, optional AI steps, workspace organization, export, extended capabilities, CLI reference, and troubleshooting.

Sona is a privacy-first transcript editor for people who want speech-to-text workflows to stay on their own machine by default. This guide is organized around the actual product flow, so you can jump straight to the part that matches what you need right now.

Choose the page that matches your task

The Sona workflow in one line

  1. Finish Getting Started so the offline model setup is ready.
  2. Create a transcript with Live Record or Batch Import.
  3. Refine the transcript in Edit and Playback, including speaker review or version rollback when needed.
  4. Use AI Polish and Translate only if you want LLM-assisted cleanup or translation.
  5. Use Workspace, Projects, and Inbox when you want to reopen saved work, switch project context, or organize items beyond the current editor view.
  6. Finish in Export and Settings, and use the header notification center whenever Sona surfaces recovery, update, or automation results.

AI Summary, Live Caption, Voice Typing, speaker profiles, and vocabulary tuning are side capabilities around the main workflow. Most of the time, it is easiest to get the core transcript flow working first and then open the specific extension page you need.

What this guide covers well

  • The recommended first-run path for local transcription
  • The difference between live recording and queued file transcription
  • How the editor, workspace organization, translation, and export steps fit together
  • Where speaker review, speaker profiles, and version snapshots fit into editing and handoff
  • Which support surfaces matter most in everyday use, including Dashboard, Diagnostics, Backup & Restore, Automation, and the notification center

Other docs you might need

The normal Sona path is simple: set up local transcription, create or reopen a transcript, review it in the editor, and then use workspace organization, polish, translation, summary, or export when needed.

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Getting Started