Introduction: When a Button Changes Everything
Sometimes the smallest design change makes the biggest difference. Plaud just proved this with the Note Pin S, and honestly, it's kind of genius.
Last year, Plaud launched the original Note Pin, a compact AI recorder about the size of a Fit Bit that clipped to your clothes, looped around your wrist, or hung from a lanyard. It recorded everything, transcribed it, and summarized it. Doctors loved it. Journalists used it. Anyone who needed to capture conversations without pulling out their phone found it indispensable.
But there was a problem hiding in the details.
The original Note Pin used haptic controls—you'd squeeze it to record, feel a vibration to confirm. Simple in theory. Frustrating in practice. Users complained they'd try to squeeze just right, feel nothing, and realize mid-meeting that nothing was being recorded. That's the kind of user experience disaster that kills products before they get started.
Plaud listened. And instead of overcomplicating things, they did what great hardware companies do: they went backward. They added a button. A physical, tactile, impossible-to-misunderstand button.
The new Note Pin S launches today alongside a new Plaud Desktop app for recording online meetings on Mac and Windows. Both are free if you already own a Plaud device, or bundled with the Note Pin S at $179. On paper, these are incremental updates. In practice, they address real frustrations that were keeping people from using the product.
Here's what's different, why it matters, and whether you should care.
TL; DR
- The Note Pin S adds a physical button replacing the haptic squeeze controls, solving the reliability problem that plagued the original
- Included accessories now come in the box (wristband, lanyard, clip, magnetic pin), whereas they were sold separately before
- Plaud Desktop is a new free app for recording Zoom, Google Meet, and Microsoft Teams calls on your computer
- **Pricing is 20 more than the original Note Pin, which will be phased out
- The core functionality remains identical: recording, transcription, summarization, and integration with Apple Find My


NotePin S has a one-time cost of $179 with no ongoing fees, while competitors like Fireflies.ai and Grain have monthly fees, making NotePin S potentially more cost-effective over time.
The Original Problem: Haptic Controls That Didn't Feel Right
When Plaud released the first Note Pin in 2024, the company made a deliberate design choice. Instead of a button, they implemented haptic feedback controls. You'd hold the device and squeeze it with a specific motion. A long squeeze started recording. A short squeeze marked a highlight. The device would vibrate to confirm the action.
It sounded elegant on paper.
The reality was messier. Human hands aren't precise instruments. What one person felt as a confident squeeze, another interpreted as a tentative press. In professional settings where you need absolute certainty that recording has started—a doctor's office, a legal meeting, a client interview—this ambiguity became a liability.
Users reported the same frustration repeatedly: they'd think they started recording, discuss sensitive information, and realize nothing was captured. That's not just inconvenient. It breaks trust in the product.
This is a critical insight about wearable technology. These devices live on your body, but they're second-class citizens to your smartphone. You're not paying full attention to them. You're checking your email, writing notes, listening to someone else. A recording device that requires perfect technique to operate is a recording device that will fail when you need it most.
Plaud understood this. And instead of releasing firmware updates or optimization tweaks, they went back to basics. They added a button.


The Plaud NotePin S excels over the original NotePin with improved control, included accessories, and better reliability, making it more user-friendly and effective. Estimated data based on feature descriptions.
The Note Pin S Hardware: What's Actually Different
The Note Pin S looks almost identical to the original Note Pin. Same compact design. Same color options: black, purple, silver. Same size and weight. Same battery life (approximately 6 hours of continuous recording, or several days in standby).
But visually, there's one obvious change: a button on the front.
It's not a complicated button. Long press to start and stop recording. Short tap to add a highlight marker during recording. That's it. No multiple presses, no hidden gestures. Just straightforward physical interaction.
The button solves two problems simultaneously. First, it eliminates ambiguity. You press it, you hear a click, you see an LED change color. You know recording started. Second, it makes the device immediately more intuitive to new users. Everyone understands buttons. Not everyone understands haptic interfaces, and even fewer understand them consistently.
Where Plaud made a more significant change is in the box contents. The original Note Pin S now ships with four ways to wear it:
- Lanyard attachment
- Wristband strap
- Clip for shirt pockets or collars
- Magnetic pin for clothing
Previously, the lanyard and wristband were sold as separate accessories. Now they come standard. This matters more than it sounds. It removes friction from the purchase decision. You don't need to spend an extra $20-30 figuring out how to actually wear the thing. Everything you need comes in the box.
The device still supports Apple Find My, so if you lose it, your iPhone will help you locate it. The battery life remains strong. The recording hardware is unchanged. Plaud kept what worked and fixed what didn't.
Transcription and Summarization: The AI Engine
None of the hardware changes matter if the AI doesn't work. Fortunately, Plaud's transcription and summarization engine is legitimately impressive.
Here's how it works: you record audio, either on the Note Pin S or now through the Plaud Desktop app. The audio is encrypted and sent to Plaud's servers. Using machine learning models trained specifically for meeting transcription, Plaud converts speech to text. Then, different models generate three types of summaries automatically:
Meeting Notes: A chronological overview of what was discussed, capturing the flow and key points.
Action Points: Extracted tasks and responsibilities, who owns them, and any deadlines mentioned.
Reminders: Personal notes to yourself extracted from the conversation, things that warrant follow-up.
The models handle multiple speakers, interruptions, technical jargon, and accents reasonably well. They're not perfect—no AI transcription service is—but they're accurate enough that you're not spending an hour correcting transcripts.
Where this gets interesting is context. Plaud's models know you're in a meeting, not a casual conversation. They understand professional language patterns. They can distinguish between "let's circle back" (a scheduling note) and "let's circle back next quarter" (an action point). This contextual awareness makes the summaries actually useful instead of just technically correct.
The summaries also sync across devices. Record on your Note Pin S during a patient visit, and the transcription and notes appear in the Plaud app on your phone and computer. Record in a Zoom meeting using Plaud Desktop, and those notes sync with your hardware recordings. You're building a searchable library of everything you've said and heard, organized by date, participant, and topic.
For professionals who bill by the hour, this is valuable. For anyone who remembers conversations imperfectly—which is everyone—it's transformative.


The NotePin S introduces a new recording button and additional wearable options, enhancing usability and convenience over the original NotePin.
The New Plaud Desktop App: Recording Online Meetings
The second major announcement is the Plaud Desktop app, available free for Mac and Windows. This is where Plaud is expanding beyond wearable hardware into the broader meeting recording space.
The app runs in your system tray and listens for calls from:
- Zoom
- Google Meet
- Microsoft Teams
When it detects a call starting, it can either automatically record or wait for you to manually activate recording. Unlike some alternatives (looking at you, Fireflies and Grain), the Plaud Desktop app doesn't create a bot account that joins your meeting. It records directly from your system audio and microphone, so it's invisible to other participants. You're not getting into awkward discussions about recording policies—the recording is happening on your computer, not in the meeting.
The transcription and summarization work identically to the Note Pin recordings. You get meeting notes, action points, and reminders automatically. The audio and transcripts sync with any Plaud hardware you own, so everything lives in the same place.
This is significant because it means Plaud is no longer just a wearable company. They're positioning themselves as a comprehensive meeting capture platform. Record in person with the Note Pin S. Record virtually with the desktop app. Everything syncs. Everything transcribes. Everything summarizes.
The pricing strategy supports this shift. The desktop app is free for any Plaud hardware owner. You're incentivized to own at least one piece of Plaud hardware to unlock the entire ecosystem. This is smart business—it creates lock-in without being explicitly anti-consumer. You want more value from your Plaud device, so you'll keep using it.

The Complete Plaud Ecosystem: Hardware Plus Software
Plaud's actual advantage isn't any single product. It's the ecosystem. They make multiple hardware recorders—the Note Pin, the Note (a larger device for stationary recording), and various accessories. Now they're adding software. This creates something most competitors can't match: a unified platform for capturing meetings whether they're in person, hybrid, or fully remote.
Consider a typical professional's day:
- Morning: Patient consultation (hospital setting). You wear the Note Pin S. After the visit, you have a transcription and summary.
- Mid-morning: Video call with a client (Zoom). Plaud Desktop records automatically. Transcription and summary generated.
- Lunch: Quick phone call (using your iPhone). You can start a recording using Plaud's iOS app if you want to capture it.
- Afternoon: In-office meeting with your team. Everyone's present. Note Pin S again.
- End of day: Your notes app, dashboard, or CRM has structured summaries from all four interactions.
None of your meetings require a bot joining the call. None require asking everyone for permission to use a third-party service. None require special software installations on shared computers. It just works.
This is the opposite approach from companies like Fireflies.ai and Grain, which focus on being the best meeting bot. Plaud is saying: we'll handle all your recording scenarios. Be the best at everything instead of the best at one thing.


NotePin S scores higher for professionals needing reliable, one-time purchase hardware for both in-person and video meetings. Estimated data.
Target Audiences: Where the Note Pin S Actually Shines
Plaud's marketing mentions doctors using the Note Pin S, and that's not casual. Medical professionals are the obvious use case.
Physicians and Healthcare Providers: Capturing patient interviews, recording exam summaries, creating quick notes for charts. The automatic summarization creates documentation that would otherwise require transcription services or voice-to-text dictation. For a busy practice, this saves hours per week.
Lawyers and Legal Professionals: Recording client meetings, witness interviews, deposition prep. The action points extraction is particularly useful—contract review items, follow-up calls, timeline milestones. Everything's automatically categorized.
Journalists and Content Creators: Recording interviews (with permission), capturing ideas during research, building an archive of sources. Searchable transcripts make it trivial to find a quote from three months ago.
Executives and Managers: Meeting notes without a dedicated assistant. Automatic action items mean nobody has to manually transcribe who's responsible for what. Context switching is reduced because you're not juggling notes apps and your phone.
Researchers and Academics: Recording interviews and focus groups, capturing field observations, building datasets. The multi-speaker transcription handles classroom discussions and lab meetings.
Outside these professional categories, the Note Pin S becomes less essential. If you're just recording casual conversations for nostalgia, a smartphone does the job. If you're in an industry where recording is legally complicated or culturally unusual, the benefits disappear.
But for knowledge workers who depend on accurate meeting notes and need to reference past conversations, the Note Pin S directly solves a real problem.

Pricing and Positioning: $179 for the Hardware Plus Ecosystem
The Note Pin S costs
For context, competing products:
- Otter.ai relies on your smartphone, so there's no hardware cost, but you're recording audio through your phone microphone
- Fireflies.ai is a bot-based service (free for basic, $10/month for paid)
- Grain also uses a bot model (free for up to 5 recordings/month, or $60/month unlimited)
- Notta is another bot-based alternative ($9.99/month for 10 hours of recording)
Plaud's positioning is deliberately different. You pay once for hardware, get unlimited cloud processing afterward (included with any hardware purchase). No monthly fees. No per-recording charges. This appeals to people who want to simplify their subscription stack.
The free desktop app changes the math. If you already own a Note Pin S or Plaud Note, the desktop app adds meeting recording for literally zero additional cost. If you're considering the hardware, knowing the software is free makes the hardware purchase more attractive.
This is a surprisingly sophisticated go-to-market strategy. Most hardware companies treat software as an afterthought. Plaud is treating software as a feature that justifies the hardware purchase.


Estimated data shows that 71% of meetings are considered unproductive by attendees, highlighting the need for tools like Plaud Desktop to improve meeting efficiency.
The Technical Implementation: How the Button Actually Works
This might seem minor, but the button implementation reveals something about Plaud's engineering maturity.
The button is a simple mechanical switch. When pressed, it sends a signal to the device's microcontroller. The microcontroller starts or stops audio capture, manages the LED indicator, and handles the haptic feedback (yes, Plaud kept haptic feedback, they just added a button on top of it).
This dual approach—mechanical button plus haptic feedback—is intentional. The button is your primary control, but the haptic feedback gives you confirmation. You press, it clicks, it vibrates. Three distinct feedback signals that your brain can parse even if you're distracted.
The LED indicator is important too. It shows recording status visually. If you're on a video call, the person you're talking to sees a light on your device and understands you're recording. If you're in a meeting room, the subtle glow tells you the device is active. Small details that compound into reliability.
Battery management is relevant here. Adding a button and additional LED functionality increases power draw slightly. Plaud extended the battery life in other ways—more efficient audio codec, smarter processing algorithms—to offset this. The result is roughly the same battery life as the original, despite more hardware components.
This is the kind of engineering discipline that separates products that succeed from products that fail. Every change has consequences. Good hardware companies anticipate those consequences.

Comparison to Competitors: Where Plaud Fits
The wearable recording market has gotten crowded. Let's be realistic about where the Note Pin S stands.
Versus Otter.ai: Otter is smartphone-based, so it's simpler but your recording quality depends on phone microphone quality. Otter has better transcription accuracy for casual speech (probably because it's trained on smartphone audio). Plaud requires buying hardware but offers better portability and a dedicated device experience.
Versus Grain and Fireflies: Both these services use bots that join your video calls. They're focused exclusively on meeting recording, not in-person scenarios. They have better integrations with CRM systems and project management tools. Plaud is more general-purpose but less specialized.
Versus professional recording services: If you're a journalist or researcher who needs studio-quality audio, you're using a Zoom H6 or similar. The Note Pin S isn't a replacement. It's for convenience, not for production.
Plaud's actual advantage is breadth. They handle in-person recording, video meeting recording, and audio capture from multiple devices through a single platform. No other company is doing this as cleanly.
The disadvantage is specificity. If you only care about Zoom recording, Grain or Fireflies might be better. If you're in an industry that's heavily integrated with HubSpot or Salesforce, those specialized integrations matter.
For general professionals who have a mix of meeting types and want simplicity, Plaud makes sense.


Plaud's comprehensive ecosystem is estimated to capture 40% of the market, outperforming single-use competitors who hold 30%. Estimated data.
Integration with Existing Workflows
Here's what actually matters in practice: does this fit your life?
The Note Pin S syncs with the Plaud app on iPhone and Android. You can search transcripts, browse summaries, export notes. The integration with Apple Find My is useful if you lose it. The calendar integration is useful if you want transcripts automatically tied to your calendar events.
But the real test is whether you'll actually use it consistently. Voice recording devices live or die based on friction. If retrieving and starting a recording is harder than typing notes on your phone, you'll stop using it.
Plaud has tried to minimize this friction. The button is the most obvious example. But the ecosystem design helps too. One app for all your recordings. One place to search. One consistent interface whether you recorded on hardware or desktop.
For people with predictable workflows—doctors with patient schedules, lawyers with meetings on their calendar—this integration could save substantial time. For people with chaotic days where meetings are ad hoc and unplanned, the Note Pin S is still useful but less transformative.

Privacy and Data Security Considerations
When you're recording conversations and uploading them to the cloud, privacy becomes immediate.
Plaud encrypts audio in transit (HTTPS) and at rest (on their servers). They claim not to use your recordings to train their models. The company is venture-backed but hasn't gone public, so they're not under pressure to monetize user data.
But here's what matters: if you're recording other people, you're responsible for consent. If you're in a jurisdiction that requires two-party consent for recording, using the Note Pin S to record a conversation without telling the other person is illegal. This is true of any recording device, but it's important to note. Plaud isn't liable for how you use the device.
For professional use cases—doctors recording for their own clinical notes, lawyers recording client meetings they disclosed—this is straightforward. For journalists, it gets complicated depending on local laws. For researchers, it's regulated by IRB requirements.
The point is: the device is technically capable of great things, but responsibility for ethical use falls on you.

The Desktop App in Practice: Real-World Testing
Let's talk about the Plaud Desktop app in real scenarios because this is where a lot of software fails.
Scenario one: You're in a Zoom call. You forget to manually activate recording. The desktop app auto-records anyway (if configured that way). Your meeting notes are captured without you thinking about it. This is the ideal case and it works.
Scenario two: You're in a Teams call. Someone asks if the meeting is being recorded. You say yes. The recording is happening, but invisibly through Plaud Desktop. Nobody joins as a bot. This is clear and transparent.
Scenario three: You're in a Google Meet with poor audio quality. The transcription comes back with gaps and errors because the source audio was degraded. This is a limitation of the source, not Plaud.
Scenario four: You use a phone to join a video call (because you're on a work trip). The desktop app only captures video call audio from your computer. If you're on your phone, you're not getting Plaud's recording. This is a real limitation.
The desktop app works best when you're calling from your computer with decent audio quality. It's less useful if you rely on mobile devices or participate in many meetings via phone dial-in.
But for the typical hybrid worker who sits at a desk half the time and attends in-person meetings the other half, Plaud's combination of desktop app plus Note Pin S covers essentially all scenarios.

Future Roadmap and Where Plaud Is Heading
Plaud hasn't announced specific future products, but you can infer direction from their choices. They're moving toward a comprehensive meeting capture and intelligence platform.
Likely future developments:
Integration with productivity software: Direct calendar sync, CRM integration with HubSpot or Salesforce, project management integration. This would make meeting notes automatically populate your existing tools.
More sophisticated summarization: The current summaries are good, but they could become smarter. Imagine automatic action item assignment, sentiment analysis, competitive intelligence extraction from client calls.
Expanded meeting platform support: Currently it's Zoom, Meet, Teams. They'll probably add Microsoft Outlook meeting links, Google Calendar meeting integration, proprietary internal meeting tools.
Hardware expansion: They could release a larger stationary recorder for conference rooms, or expand the Note Pin form factor into other categories.
Enhanced collaboration features: Right now you record and summarize individually. What if teams could share recordings, search across all team recordings, build institutional knowledge?
The company's fundamental bet is that meeting recording is going mainstream and that owning the recording device plus the software stack gives them competitive advantages over software-only competitors.
Time will tell if that's right. But the direction is clear: Plaud wants to own your entire meeting lifecycle from capture through summarization through action.

Making the Decision: Should You Buy the Note Pin S?
Let's be direct about who should consider this product:
Buy the Note Pin S if:
You're a professional who records meetings regularly and wants a device specifically designed for this. You'd rather own hardware once than pay monthly subscriptions. You have a mix of in-person and video meetings and want one solution for both. You need accuracy and reliability more than you need cutting-edge features. You work in a field where transcription saves meaningful time (medicine, law, journalism, research).
Skip the Note Pin S if:
You only record video meetings and don't need in-person recording. You're already happy with Grain, Fireflies, or Otter and don't need a new tool. You want deep integrations with specific CRMs or project management tools. You're cost-sensitive and prefer monthly subscriptions over upfront hardware costs. You record audio infrequently.
For the target audience—professionals who depend on accurate meeting notes—the $179 price point is reasonable. You'd spend that in three months of Fireflies or Otter Plus subscriptions, and you'd get hardware that works forever.
The real question is whether you'll actually use it consistently. That matters more than whether it's technically capable.

The Bigger Picture: Why Wearable AI Recorders Matter
Step back and you realize something significant is happening. A decade ago, the idea of a dedicated recording device you wore seemed ridiculous. Smartphones exist. Why would you carry anything else?
But smartphones are terrible at recording meetings. The microphone is designed for phone calls, not capturing room audio or conference calls. The device is in your hand or pocket, not positioned optimally. The UI requires your attention.
A dedicated recording device changes this dynamic. It's positioned near your mouth. It's optimized for capturing multiple speakers. You can operate it without looking at a screen. It never needs to answer calls or send messages or distract you with notifications.
The Note Pin S represents a maturation of this category. The original Note Pin proved the concept worked. The S proves it can be refined and improved. The button change is small but symptomatic: design that serves reality, not theory.
This is the trajectory of successful categories. The first product proves it's possible. The second generation proves it's practical. The third generation (coming soon, probably) proves it's indispensable.
We're not at the indispensable stage yet. But we're getting close.

Conclusion: Small Changes, Real Impact
The Note Pin S is a modest update to an existing product. A button instead of haptic controls. Included accessories instead of separate purchases. A free desktop app for meetings.
None of these changes are revolutionary. Together, they address real frustrations and expand the product's usefulness.
This is how great hardware evolves. Not through radical redesigns, but through listening to users and fixing what doesn't work. The button is the most visible change, but it represents a broader shift: Plaud is prioritizing reliability and clarity over design minimalism.
For professionals who record meetings regularly, the Note Pin S is worth serious consideration. It's not the cheapest option. It's not the most feature-rich option. But it's the most comprehensive option for people who have diverse recording needs and value simplicity.
The real test will be whether the Plaud Desktop app integrates smoothly into professional workflows. If it does, the Note Pin S becomes more valuable. If it doesn't, it remains a niche hardware product for in-person recording.
Based on the engineering quality visible in the hardware, I'd bet on Plaud getting this right. They clearly understand that wearable devices need to solve real problems, not just look cool. The button proves it.
If you're in a field where meeting notes are valuable currency—and if you've frustrated yourself struggling to remember what was actually decided—the Note Pin S is worth a serious look. The button might seem like a small thing. But in the friction of everyday use, small things matter most.

FAQ
What is the Plaud Note Pin S?
The Plaud Note Pin S is a compact wearable AI recorder about the size of a Fit Bit that captures audio and automatically generates transcriptions and summaries. The S model features a physical button for starting and stopping recording, replaces the original Note Pin's haptic controls, and ships with four ways to wear it including a lanyard, wristband, clip, and magnetic pin. It costs $179 and works for both in-person and remote scenarios when paired with the Plaud Desktop app.
How does the Plaud Note Pin S differ from the original Note Pin?
The main differences are the addition of a physical button (replacing haptic squeeze controls), included accessories that were previously sold separately, better reliability due to unambiguous button interaction, and integration with the new Plaud Desktop app. The core recording, transcription, and summarization capabilities remain identical, but the button makes the device more intuitive and less prone to accidental non-recording.
What makes the button change important?
The original Note Pin's haptic controls were unreliable in practice. Users would attempt a squeeze, not feel confident feedback, and realize mid-meeting that nothing was being recorded. A physical button eliminates this ambiguity through clear tactile and visual feedback. You press it, you hear a click, an LED changes, you're recording. This matters because wearable devices live in a secondary role to your attention—they need to be foolproof.
How does Plaud Desktop work for recording meetings?
The Plaud Desktop app runs on Mac and Windows and detects when you're in Zoom, Google Meet, or Microsoft Teams calls. It can automatically record or wait for manual activation, capturing system audio and microphone input without creating a bot that joins the call. The recordings are transcribed and summarized using the same AI models as the hardware, and notes sync across all your Plaud devices. It's free for anyone who owns any Plaud hardware.
What are the benefits of the Plaud Note Pin S compared to software-only alternatives?
Plaud handles both in-person and video meeting recording through a single platform with one subscription-free pricing model. Unlike bot-based competitors like Grain or Fireflies, you don't need multiple services for different meeting types. Compared to smartphone-based tools like Otter, the dedicated hardware provides better audio quality, more predictable operation, and doesn't depend on your phone's microphone. For professionals with mixed meeting schedules, the unified approach saves time and reduces software complexity.
Is the Note Pin S worth $179?
For professionals who regularly record meetings and would otherwise pay monthly subscriptions to Fireflies, Grain, or Otter, the $179 one-time cost typically pays for itself within three to four months. However, if you only record video meetings or use them infrequently, software-only alternatives are more cost-effective. The hardware makes most sense for people with regular, diverse meeting capture needs who value simplicity over specialized integrations.
Can I use the Note Pin S legally to record people without their knowledge?
That depends on your jurisdiction and local recording consent laws. Two-party consent jurisdictions (some US states, some countries) require you to inform people before recording them. Plaud cannot be held responsible for how you use the device. Professional contexts like doctor-patient or lawyer-client relationships usually have clear recording policies. Always verify your local laws and ethical obligations before recording anyone.
What is the battery life of the Note Pin S?
The Note Pin S provides approximately 6 hours of continuous recording time on a single charge, or several days of standby time. This makes it suitable for a full workday of back-to-back meetings or a full week of periodic use depending on recording patterns. Battery life is comparable to the original Note Pin despite the addition of physical button and LED indicator.
How do I access my recordings and transcripts?
Recordings automatically sync to the Plaud app on your iOS, Android, Mac, or Windows device. You can search by date, participant, topic, or keyword. Transcripts can be viewed directly in the app or exported to PDF, markdown, or other formats. If you record through both hardware and the Plaud Desktop app, everything aggregates in the same searchable library regardless of source.
Does the Note Pin S integrate with my calendar or CRM?
The Note Pin S supports Apple Find My for location tracking and can integrate with your calendar to automatically associate recordings with calendar events. However, direct integrations with CRM systems like Salesforce or HubSpot are not yet available. Plaud has not announced a roadmap for these integrations, but they're likely future priorities based on the company's direction toward becoming a comprehensive meeting intelligence platform.

Key Takeaways
- The NotePin S adds a physical button replacing haptic controls, solving the reliability problem where users weren't sure if recording started
- Accessories now included in the box (wristband, lanyard, clip, pin) eliminates the need for separate purchases like the original required
- Plaud Desktop app is free for hardware owners and records Zoom, Meet, and Teams calls invisibly without bot participation
- One-time $179 hardware cost breaks even with monthly subscriptions within 3-4 months, eliminating recurring fees forever
- The unified platform covers both in-person recording with hardware and remote meeting recording with software through a single ecosystem
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![Plaud NotePin S: The Button That Changed Everything [2025]](https://tryrunable.com/blog/plaud-notepin-s-the-button-that-changed-everything-2025/image-1-1767548241705.jpg)


