Dettivo

For

Pick your circuit.

Same Mac app, five different ways to use it. Every page names the tools you already use, the workflow you already have, and where Dettivo fits inside it.

§ 01 · For developers

Dictate into your editor. Pipe transcripts into your agent.

Code review comments at 11pm. Commit messages on a walk. Voice notes that land directly in the file you’re editing — and a CLI, REST, and MCP server that let your scripts and agents read every transcript Dettivo has ever captured.

VS Code · Cursor · Zed

§ 02 · For researchers

Every interview, every seminar, in your second brain.

Researchers live in long, dense, audio-first sessions: interviews, advisor meetings, conference talks, journal-club discussions. Dettivo captures all of them locally and writes the full bundle straight into your Obsidian vault — so the next paper, grant, or thesis chapter can find it.

Obsidian · Zotero · Notion

§ 03 · For writers

First drafts at the speed you talk. Quotes captured cleanly.

Most writers know what they want to say before they want to type. Dettivo lets you draft into the focused app — Scrivener, Ulysses, iA Writer, Drafts, Bear — and capture interviews without inviting a meeting bot to the table.

Scrivener · Ulysses · iA Writer

§ 04 · For founders + solo operators

Three cofounder calls, four follow-ups, no copy-paste.

Founders context-switch through every app on their Mac in a single hour. Dettivo lives in the menu bar and types into all of them — and captures the meetings you ran in between, with action items and a recap email draft already written when you stop.

Linear · Slack · Notion

§ 05 · For privacy-required professionals

Client conversations stay on your Mac. Not in someone’s cloud.

Lawyers, therapists, doctors, financial advisors — anyone whose conversations are governed by attorney-client privilege, HIPAA, or similar. Dettivo captures and transcribes every session locally on your Mac. No cloud upload, no meeting bot guest, no third-party processor.

Clio · PracticePanther · SimplePractice