Products

A Small but Wonderful Improvement for Content Creation
This is the scenario I experience all the time whenever I want to write something serious, whether a commentary on a movie, or market research in a specific field. I search, bookmark, save and download every materials related to the aimed subject. The materials may be webpages, videos, audios, PDFs, images, saved in various places. I should be crystal clear where to trace them when I do a preliminary research before writing my own words. What if these materials are saved in one place? What if I can take notes to each materials side by side, rather than using a separate note book or note app? Now I'm already a little tired making reference to the materials while working on my draft. Asking AI for help comes to mind soon. I try several popular AI models, feed them with diverse materials and prompts, receive deep thinking results, and knead them into my draft. You can imagine, windows, webpages, files and apps spread my screen in layers. It is painstaking to close or open, maximize or minimize a thousand time while doing the work. Creating something from an idea to a work is never an easy task. Is there a tool to alleviate the workload? What if these content creation related tasks can be done in one place like a panel? Luckily, YouMind saved me and anyone who is struggling with coming up with something good and new. YouMind is the AI-powered creation studio accompanying your entire process of content creation, from capturing inspiration, gathering materials, drafting content, to accomplishing a final work, and sharing to others. It allows unlimited use of materials and AI capabilities. In YouMind, you get Just as the iPhone creatively integrated communication, entertainment, and internet experiences into one device, YouMind redefines the future of creation. The Integrated Creation Environment (ICE), as defined by YouMind, is an all-in-one tool that serves as an ideal workspace for content creators.
Instantly Recognizable: Use Image-to-Prompt to Create a Consistent Brand Visual Style
Take your last ten images and line them up. If they look like they belong to ten different brands — one cool and minimalist, another warm yellow hand-drawn, and the next suddenly high saturation — the problem isn't whether any single image looks good. The problem is that they're each telling a different story. In a feed flooded with content, what makes people remember you isn't a single stunning image, but a sense of continuity that makes them think, "I know it's you before I even see the handle." And that continuity isn't a talent — it's a system. Visual consistency sounds like something reserved for big brands and professional designers, but at its core it's actually quite simple: the same lighting, the same color palette, the same medium texture, the same composition, repeated until it becomes your identity. The hard part is never "making one good-looking image" — it's "making the hundredth image still look like it belongs in the same family as the first." And ironically, AI image generation tools have made this harder. The very thing that makes text-to-image so appealing is precisely what makes it dangerous for branding: every generation is a little different. The same prompt, "warm, healing illustration style," might give you creamy soft light today and a rich orange-red intensity tomorrow. The same "minimalist product shot" might come out with a pure white background this time, and inexplicably add a shadow next time. The model reinterprets your vague description from scratch each time, and it never really internalizes what "your brand should look like" in your mind. So you fall into a familiar loop: you describe each image from zero, it's always a bit off, you settle and post it, and months later you look back and your account looks like it was managed by three or four people with completely different aesthetics. is often used as a simple tool to "reverse-engineer how an image was made." But in the context of branding, it does something far more important: it takes a visual style you can recognize instantly but struggle to describe, and fixes it into a block of text you can copy and reuse. The approach is simple. First, pick a "style anchor" image that represents your brand's vibe — it could be your best-performing post, a reference image you keep coming back to, or a baseline image you specifically created for this brand. Feed it to the tool, and it will "read" that image into a structured description: what the subject is, where the light comes from, whether the color palette is cool or warm, whether it's photography or illustration, the depth of field and texture, and the overall mood. This description is the textual version of your brand's visual DNA. From now on, you don't have to rewrite from scratch by feel every time. You hold a template you can reuse as-is. In an extracted prompt, some elements are your brand's constants, and some are just the content of that particular image. Separating them is the key to the whole method. What you should lock down usually includes these: the color palette — the set of hues that makes people recognize you at a glance; the lighting — soft morning light or hard side light; the medium texture — realistic photography, semi-realistic illustration, or 3D rendering; the composition habit — lots of negative space, subject centered or off-center; and the overall mood — calm, crisp, or vibrant. Together, they are the part that makes people say, "I recognize you before I even see clearly." What you should swap each time is just the content itself: this time the subject is Product A, next time Product B; this image is about a breakfast scene, that one about a desk. You preserve the "genes" of your style, replace only that one variable, and regenerate — the lighting and color palette carry over, and only what you changed actually changes. That is the real dividing line between "producing a whole set of images that belong to the same brand" and "gambling on luck from scratch every single time." The real test of brand visual consistency isn't a single image — it's across contexts. A blog post cover, a set of social media images, an external PPT — if they all have different styles, even great content feels fragmented. With that fixed prompt, you can spread the same visual language across every touchpoint: use it to generate a blog cover that carries your brand's tone, create a set of images for social posts that look like they belong together, and even set a unified look for illustrations in your presentations. In YouMind, starting from this prompt, you can flow through all these tasks seamlessly — covers, supporting images, and slides share the same light and color palette, instead of each going its own way. Since a prompt is plain text, it works across different tools: Nano Banana Pro, GPT Image 2, Midjourney, and Stable Diffusion can all read the same description. Your brand style isn't locked into one model. There's a line worth drawing clearly. Drawing inspiration from an image's lighting, composition, and atmosphere is healthy. But if your "style anchor" comes directly from a competitor's signature visual, a copyrighted famous character, or another brand's logo, and you use it as your own face — that slides from "building a style" into "impersonating an identity." Generic "style" isn't owned by anyone, but a brand's specific, recognizable expression is its own asset. So the safest approach is to anchor on your own material — your products, your scenes, your baseline — and then use the extracted prompt to systematize and scale it. Every image you produce will then be both consistent and genuinely yours. In the past, brand visual consistency relied on a designer who remembered every detail, or a style guide nobody wanted to read. Now, you can compress it into a block of text: extract once, reuse repeatedly, swap only what needs to change. The next time you need an image for new content, you don't have to gamble on luck staring at a blank prompt box. You already know what your brand looks like, and you can make it look that way every time. How does Image to Prompt help with brand visual consistency? It translates an image that represents your brand's vibe into a structured prompt. You lock down the color palette, lighting, medium, and composition, and each time you only replace the subject or scene. The output images will always maintain the same style. Which image should I use as a "style anchor"? Your own material is safest: your best-performing post, a baseline image you specifically created, or a finished image that best represents your brand's vibe. Try to avoid using competitors or copyrighted characters as anchors. Can this prompt be used across different AI tools? Yes. The output is plain text, and mainstream text-to-image tools like Nano Banana Pro, GPT Image 2, Midjourney, and Stable Diffusion can all use it directly. Your brand style won't be locked into one model. Will it make every image look exactly the same? No. It locks down the stylistic constants, but the content is still different each time. The goal is to make them look like "one family," not to copy-paste the same image. Do I need experience in design or prompt writing? No. The extraction step translates visuals into text for you. You just need to decide which elements are your brand constants and which ones to swap, and you can start reusing.

AI Is Breaking the Old Containers of Human Thought
The first time it happened, the entire office froze. Then someone whispered, “Holy shit.” A whole chorus followed. Static text on a screen had just transformed—right in front of us—into something responsive, fluid, almost breathing. It was the first successful run of Gemini 3’s Dynamic View inside YouMind, together with Nano Banana Pro and its image-generation engine. And of course I had to try it myself. The problem was… I had zero imagination at that moment. So I picked the first idea my mind grabbed: What if I turned my tedious AI newsletter into The Daily Prophet—the moving-portrait newspaper from Harry Potter? I built it. It worked. Interacive The Daily Prophet, AI Newsletter Edition. Get the same effect And for a moment, I honestly thought I might cry. The content was nothing special—just the usual AI updates I publish every week. But now those same words were dancing in a living, enchanted broadsheet that rippled with motion and emotion. I couldn’t look away. And that’s when the real question hit me: If this thing can make mediocre content feel this compelling, what could it do with something truly great? At first glance, this feels like a cool visual trick. A fancy animation. A magic newspaper. But that’s the small story. The big story is that it breaks a spell we’ve been under for thousands of years—a spell that looks suspiciously like a softer version of Orwell’s Newspeak. In 1984, the regime creates Newspeak, a language that shrinks the range of human thought. Take away the word freedom, and people eventually lose the concept of freedom. Compress language, compress thought. But here’s the uncomfortable truth: you and I have been living under our own form of Newspeak too. Not enforced by a regime, but by something subtler: Technique. Inside your mind, ideas aren’t linear. They’re three-dimensional, layered, spatial—like a palace with rooms, staircases, and hidden doors. But unless you’re a painter, architect, or musician, you can’t express that in the most vivid way. You are forced to flatten everything onto the narrow strip of linear text. One sentence after another. One idea squeezed behind the next. The moment the thought leaves your mind, it loses its depth. Even in the internet age, this problem hasn’t gone away. You know a webpage could be spatial, interactive, dynamic—but you don’t know how to code, or design, or orchestrate a layout. So you retreat back to static documents, the safe zone where complexity must shrink to fit. Technique compresses expression. And by compressing expression, it compresses thought itself. This is why your idea feels brilliant in your head but underwhelming on the page. The container kills the energy long before the world has a chance to see it. But when Gemini 3 merges with Nano Banana Pro inside YouMind, that ceiling finally cracks. For the first time, text, visuals, motion, and interaction flow together in a single medium that anyone can control. For the first time, you can express a spatial thought as a spatial thought. Not because you know design—but because AI makes design permeable. This is the anti-Newspeak charm: AI returns the right to think—previously stolen by technique—back to creators. When the container expands, the mind expands with it. There’s another barrier that AI quietly dissolves: aesthetics. Once, beauty was a privilege. At the École des Beaux-Arts in Paris, professors walked through exam studios and silently sorted student drawings into two piles: continue and leave. No criteria. No explanations. Aesthetics was a private language, accessible only to those with time, wealth, and training. YouMind can now generate interfaces with natural rhythm, hierarchy, and harmony. You don’t need to “know design” to express something that looks designed. Beauty becomes public infrastructure. And once the fear of “making it pretty” disappears, creators can finally return to the real question: What kind of spiritual world do I want to build? If aesthetics is the face, value delivery is the soul. In the 1990s, McKinsey redefined consulting by shifting from dense “Blue Books” to clean, visual PowerPoint decks. It changed not only how knowledge was presented, but how it was valued. Today, YouMind stands at McKinsey’s Moment, but multiplied. For consultants, educators, researchers—anyone whose work is knowledge—documents are no longer the final output. They are raw ingredients. The real output is the interface: a living, interactive expression of your ideas. You are no longer selling information. You’re selling an experience of understanding. A century ago, the New Culture Movement in China fought for the right to write in everyday language—vernacular instead of classical. The argument was simple: Expression is a right. Not a privilege. Today, we are in a new kind of cultural movement: the right to use space, motion, and interaction to build the worlds we imagine. For the first time in history: A writer can think like an architect. A student can compose ideas like a director. A researcher can present information like an infographic designer. Your creations don’t just sit on a page. They stand upright. They breathe. They converse back. There’s a quiet irony here. You’re reading this in a text document—while I’m explaining why text is no longer enough. Text remains the fastest way to capture a spark. But it is no longer the limit of what that spark can become. Just like the philosophy at the heart of YouMind: “Everything starts as a Draft. and a Draft becomes Everything.” Text is the seed. Don’t leave it trapped in the jar. This draft and the accompanying visuals were co-created with YouMind.

YouMind Officially Supports Chinese Interface
Friends in the Chinese community, YouMind is where learning meets creation. From saving information to getting answers, from flashes of inspiration to finished works, everything flows naturally in one coherent space. You can learn, think, and create with AI, without switching between multiple tools. We believe that collecting is not the goal; learning and creating are. YouMind will learn your way of thinking and understand your ideas from your highlights, notes, and annotations as you read, watch, and listen, and create with you. Starting today, YouMind officially supports a Chinese interface. Here are some of the most important features to help you get started quickly. YouMind now supports16 languages. You can choose your preferred language in the settings. We've divided language settings into two independent options: the interface display language controls the language of the entire application interface, while the AI response language controls the language used when AI generates content. This design allows for flexible combinations. For example, you can use a Chinese interface but have AI respond in English to practice the language, or vice versa. However, multilingual support is an ongoing optimization process. If you find any inaccuracies in the translation, please feel free to provide feedback, and we will continue to improve. One of the hardest things in the learning process is knowing how to start. Although there are many AI conversations now, you get many answers in an instant, but the answers in this process are often unsatisfactory. Learning a new topic is a continuous exploration process. YouMind's approach today is a step-by-step method, just like when we search for information ourselves, from initial Google searches to gradually noting key points. After you enter a topic, YouMind will clearly present each step: analyzing the topic, finding materials, researching content, automatic organization, and outputting a summary. We also provide scenario templates, such as "YouTube Learning" which can deeply analyze video content. In just a few minutes, you can go from "not knowing where to start" to "the first actionable step." Once you know where to start, the real change happens within the project. Materials, ideas, and outputs can flow in one place, eliminating the need to frequently switch tools. Snippets you save from web pages, timestamped YouTube highlights, and PDF annotations can all return to the materials area or directly become context for writing. We've introduced a three-column structure in projects: Materials on the left, Crafts in the middle, and Tools on the right. This meets your scenario needs, whether it's for assisted reading, learning research, or final creative output. Moreover, any notes you take during the process can be converted into documents or other outputs, and all references are traceable, eliminating the need for cross-referencing. Within a project, several core features work together: In a project, you can open AI chat at any time. Whether it's asking questions, analyzing materials, or having AI help you complete a quick command, it's your most direct assistant. Combined with the "Quick Commands" feature, you can quickly execute tasks in a conversation using preset prompts. Whether it's reading, writing, or generating images, you can invoke it with a single click. We provide a Quick Command Center where you can find excellent quick commands shared by users and explore different innovative ways to use them. Users who share quick commands can also earn reward points. We welcome you to explore more possibilities with the community. When reading materials, "Excerpts" help you quickly save important information. Whether it's text and images from web pages, subtitle snippets and screenshots from YouTube videos (precise to the time frame), key segments from Podcast audio, or highlighted content from PDF documents, all can be quickly saved to the project's materials area via "Excerpts." More importantly, these "Excerpts" can directly serve as context for subsequent creation, making your output well-supported. "Listen" is a feature that converts content into audio, allowing learning to happen in any scenario. You can choose a three-minute quick listen to quickly grasp the core points of long content, or choose a more natural conversational audio format for deeper understanding. Any materials in your project, documents and notes you've created, YouTube videos, and Podcasts can generate audio. On your commute, during a walk, or while doing chores, you can continue learning with "Listen." "Crafts" is YouMind's creative hub, helping you transform ideas and materials into documents. Beyond mere generation, AI-generated content is editable from the first second; every sentence can be rewritten, split, and moved, no longer a one-time spark. All generated content can be traced back to original materials, eliminating the need for cross-referencing, allowing you to clearly see the source of each idea. The "Crafts" area not only supports text creation but also multimodal output. When text alone isn't enough to express your ideas, you can generate an audio version of the same content, or even images. Once a topic is fully developed, you can reuse key points in another topic, allowing content to continue growing. The "Crafts" feature is not just a generation tool; it's your creative partner. That concludes the feature introduction. But for us, piling on features has never been the goal. Our original intention for YouMind is simple: to make learning and creation no longer a solitary moment, but a naturally flowing process. Tools should understand you and grow with you. We will continue to refine the product so you can focus on what truly matters – learning, thinking, and creating. We are delighted that friends from the Chinese community are joining YouMind. If you have any thoughts, suggestions, or questions, please feel free to communicate with us. You can provide feedback within the product, or join our WeChat group to explore with more YouMind users. We hope YouMind accompanies you in every exploration and creation. Visit now:If on mobile, you can also open it in a browser:If you are an iOS user, you can search for YouMind in the App Store We await you in the world of creation.

YouMind iOS 1.2: Shipping Imperfect
After months of development, the new YouMind iOS version is live. First, an apology. This isn't the complete version yet. We decided to ship this early experience version after some bold exploration. There are still many details we need to polish. Why the rush to launch? Two reasons. We want to hear your feedback, and we want to use rapid iteration to push our team's pace. In this post, I want to share three key decisions behind this update. Those who've been with us know we're a SaaS team with years of experience in that domain. But native development is relatively new territory for us. Even with talented engineers joining the team, we're still learning from scratch. Since we're starting from scratch anyway, we made a bold decision: adopt iOS 26's design language directly and fully embrace Liquid Glass Why bet on new tech when we're still learning the ropes? Because we believe it's better to grow alongside Apple's latest design than chase mature solutions from the past. This decision means higher technical risk, but it also means we're keeping pace from day one. But this journey has been complicated. We scrapped at least 10 versions, repeatedly figuring out how to keep YouMind's functionality intact while making the design truly fit iOS 26. Of course, we can't build a full Liquid Glass component library from scratch like Linear does. That kind of engineering capability makes us incredibly envious. But within our constraints, we'll make the overall experience as natural as possible. Once we had the design goal, we had to think deeper. We're not just swapping components for the sake of it. We need to rethink the entire product. This was our first generation design. It looks great, but getting into a Board required a clunky flow. Users had to either rely on materials showing up in the "Recent" list or click into Board and then pick from the list. That's really inconvenient on mobile. Here's what changed in the new version. We made Board the core entry point. Users can jump straight into their frequently used Boards and easily switch between multiple Boards. With this structure, you can smoothly use AI Chat plus material capture on mobile, letting you stream whatever materials you need from mobile scenarios right into your learning and creation space in real time. Paired with Liquid Glass design, switching between functions becomes much smoother. You might say this kind of design is common on mobile. True. But here's the thing: how do you let iOS have its own unique interaction model within an already mature SaaS framework while still syncing with the SaaS side? That's where the design challenge really is. We constantly have to balance the new design language, YouMind's product logic, and mobile usage patterns. This version still has some imperfect spots, both in design and engineering. Small regrets. But over time, we'll find better solutions. Conventional wisdom says that for SaaS first products, the mobile app is usually just a subset of features. It's practically an industry rule. Partly to manage resources, partly because mobile scenarios really do only cover some functions. But we chose a different path. When we decided to invest in iOS development, we made it clear: iOS isn't an accessory to SaaS. It's a primary entry point with its own positioning. In mobile contexts, it plays a core role: helping users collect, process, and read materials, letting learning and creation unfold naturally on mobile too. With that framing, our iOS design doesn't just follow the traditional playbook. We're trying to find its own path. For example, we'll significantly enhance voice recording on mobile. This will become a core capability of the iOS version. Imagine these scenarios: an idea pops up during a business trip, you record it instantly. After a meeting ends, you review key points while walking. Before bed, you use your voice to capture today's takeaways. Most importantly, when you open your laptop, those materials are already waiting in your Board. Whether for learning or creating, everything connects seamlessly. Voice recording differs from SaaS, but it also feeds back into SaaS, making the whole information capture experience more complete. As we iterate, you'll discover more possibilities like this. The iOS version will also follow YouMind's IPO model (Input, Process, Output), building on each stage: collecting, learning, thinking, creating. Sure, it looks a bit rough right now. But our design has already gone through several iterations, and we're confident we'll bring you a different experience.

The Specialized Tool for Solo Creators Who've Outgrown Notion's Complexity
A few months back, I found myself drowning in my own Notion workspace. What started as an elegant productivity system had morphed into a labyrinth of templates, databases, and abandoned projects. I was spending more time organizing my organization system than actually creating anything meaningful. While browsing Reddit and other social media, I noticed many voices echoing my own frustrations. The once-popular, elaborate Notion templates were losing their charm, and people were starting to seek alternatives. Then I met YouMind, which I quickly saw as the best alternative available. Its interface is aesthetically pleasing, rivaling Notion's beauty, yet it allows me to focus on learning, organizing knowledge, and creating content effectively. What follows isn't a detailed review, but my personal reflection on why I transitioned and what I discovered along the way. Don't get me wrong—Notion had been revolutionary for me initially. The flexibility, the databases, the endless customization possibilities. But somewhere along the way, that flexibility became my prison. As a personal user of Notion for over six years, I was initially captivated by its beauty and the promise of endless functionality. Countless times, I opened Notion to set up planning tables and use it as a productivity tool. It looked perfect for learning and organizing my life. Yet, reality was different. Most of my notes ended up in OneNote and Notability, while Apple Calendar and Notes managed my schedule and to-dos. Despite Notion's impressive appearance, I realized it wasn't supporting my actual productivity. My workspace looked impressive with its color-coded databases and intricate workflows, but I wasn't actually creating anything. I was managing my productivity system instead of being productive. The tool that was supposed to make me efficient had become the biggest source of my inefficiency. The breaking point came when I spent an entire afternoon setting up a "perfect" content creation workflow, complete with status trackers and automated properties—only to realize I hadn't written a single word of actual content. During my search for a better solution, I stumbled upon a post recommending YouMind. The tagline caught my attention: it's not about organizing everything, but about actually making something with what you collect. This idea of turning inputs into outputs, rather than just storing them, intrigued me. The transition to YouMind felt like moving from a cluttered warehouse to a focused studio. Instead of endless templates and database configurations, I found myself with clean "Boards"—each one dedicated to a single project. I've been using YouMind for two months now, and I'd like to share my experience with YouMind compared to Notion. This is simply a summary of some of the things I like about YouMind, along with some issues I encountered transitioning from Notion. Efficient Split-Screen Workflow The first thing that struck me was the split-screen functionality. Before YouMind, I often had to open multiple windows with Notion or other note-taking tools, manually arranging them side by side. Once I closed them, my reference sources seemed to vanish. With YouMind, I can have my research materials open on one side while writing on the other. It sounds simple, but this one feature eliminated so much friction from my workflow. Procrastination-Free ProductivityYouMind's IPO philosophy (Input → Process → Output) is like having a gentle but persistent coach. Unlike Notion, which happily lets you accumulate endless notes that become digital hoarding, YouMind nudges you toward actually doing something with what you collect. My Personal Creative SpaceNotion often feels geared towards managing external work, with integrations like Slack, email, and Teams supporting collaboration. However, I needed an isolated personal space for my information. YouMind provides that, feeling like my space in a way Notion never did. There's no pressure to use the "right" template or set up the "perfect" system. It's just me, my ideas, and an AI that helps me think through them rather than just formatting them. The AI That Actually CollaboratesNotion's AI feels like a fancy autocomplete and isn't entirely free. In contrast, YouMind's AI acts as a true partner in the process. When you start a new project, the Board helps you gather resources and draft an outline, so you're not staring at a blank page wondering where to begin. Throughout the writing process, the AI agents and shortcuts assist with rewriting and editing, rather than generating entire texts, which often results in low-quality output. The AI supports you without taking over, ensuring that the final product is truly yours, not just AI-generated content. Time Disappears (Immersive Focus Experience)In Notion, I was always aware of the system—adjusting properties, moving things between databases, maintaining my elaborate setup. In YouMind, I lose track of time because I'm actually immersed in the work. The tool disappears, and the work takes center stage. YouMind isn't trying to be your life management system. If you need complex team permissions, elaborate project tracking, or want to build a personal wiki with hundreds of interconnected pages, Notion is probably still your best bet. But if you're like me—if you find yourself drowning in your own organizational systems and yearning to actually create something—YouMind might be exactly what you need. The switch to YouMind has been transformative, not because it's perfect, but because it aligns with what I actually want to do: turn ideas into reality. It's not just a different place to store my thoughts; it's a partner that actively helps me research, synthesize, and create. If you're reading this while surrounded by your own Notion complexity, ask yourself: Do you want a more sophisticated filing cabinet, or do you want a creative partner? If it's the latter, YouMind deserves a serious look. The magic isn't in the features—it's in how the tool gets out of your way and lets you focus on what matters: making something meaningful from the chaos of information around us.

How to Get Transcript of YouTube Video in 2025: Complete Guide
In 2025, when you stumble upon a brilliant tutorial or podcast on YouTube, you no longer need to take manual notes while watching. A range of free YouTube transcript generators can instantly convert videos into text, saving you time while enabling AI-powered content repurposing. This guide compares the best tools available and highlights a standout option that delivers the most comprehensive experience. After testing multiple mainstream tools across functionality, user experience, and pricing, here's what I found. The comparison table below highlights core features: YouTubeToTranscript.com excels in being completely free with 125+ language translation support. However, it lacks direct file download capabilities (copy-paste only) and AI summary features. The page also displays ads, which may affect the user experience. NoteGPT offers a solid AI feature set, including summaries and mind map generation. However, free users get only 15 monthly credits, with heavy usage requiring paid plans (starting at $9.99/month). AI features also require registration. YouTube-Transcript.io uses a per-use billing model, offering 25 free extractions. While its API functionality appeals to developers, ordinary users may find the quota limiting. After hands-on testing, stands out across multiple dimensions: 🎨 Beautiful Interface, Zero Ads YouMind features a clean, elegant design with absolutely no ad pop-ups or banners. This allows you to focus entirely on the content without marketing interruptions disrupting your workflow. 💎 Generous Free Quota Even without registration, you get 3 free uses per day, totaling up to 90 uses per month. For most users, this quota is more than sufficient. If you need more, simply register for unlimited access - and the registration process is quick and easy. 🔧 Comprehensive and Practical Features ⚡ Streamlined User Experience Just three steps: paste YouTube link → click generate → get transcript and AI summary. The entire process takes under 10 seconds, with no registration required for basic features. The process is incredibly simple: 1.Copy Video Link - Find the YouTube video you want to transcribe and copy the URL 2.Visit Tool Page - Open 3.Paste and Generate - Paste the link into the input box and click generate 4.View Results - Within seconds, you'll see: 5.Flexible Usage - Copy text directly, download files, or login to use translation and AI features Getting the transcript is just the first step. Here are some advanced applications: Learning Scenarios Content Creation Q: Can all YouTube videos be transcribed? A: Most public videos can be transcribed. However, if video creators have disabled the caption feature, transcripts cannot be extracted. Q: How accurate are the transcripts? A: Modern AI transcription tools typically achieve 95%+ accuracy, though factors like accents and background noise can affect results. For critical uses, manual proofreading is recommended. Q: Can I batch process multiple videos? A: YouMind supports batch processing after login, allowing you to handle multiple video links simultaneously for significantly improved efficiency. Q: Can I use transcripts commercially? A: This depends on the original video's copyright. Transcription tools simply extract text - you must still comply with the original content's copyright terms. In 2025, obtaining YouTube video transcripts has become remarkably simple. Among the various options, stands out with its beautiful ad-free interface, generous free quota (90 uses per month), and comprehensive features including multi-speaker recognition and mind mapping - making it the best overall choice. Whether you're a student, content creator, or professional, it helps you leverage YouTube's vast knowledge resources more efficiently. Try it now - just paste a YouTube link and experience the seamless transformation from video to text, and from text to insights.

How to Research Using YouMind
In our work and daily lives, when we want to understand a new topic, the research process is often filled with challenges. Many people even believe that the difficulties encountered in gathering information are comparable to those of creating a document. This is because, in traditional research processes, we often face the following challenges: These issues are like mountains blocking our path to understanding new things, lowering our conversion rate from "information" to "knowledge." Next, we will explore how YouMind can address these challenges: 1. Early Interpretation for Quick Understanding of Content With the plugin provided by YouMind, when you browse a webpage, YouMind automatically analyzes the current page and outputs a visual structure. This allows you to quickly grasp the overall information structure and key points, saving time and effort while avoiding the troubles of information overload. 2. AI Chat for Intelligent Streamlining When faced with lengthy texts, AI can help you accurately extract information through dialogue, speeding up your understanding. For example, when I'm writing a document and encounter data about misinformation, I want to confirm details further. AI excellently helps me pinpoint relevant content, significantly reducing confirmation time. 3. Save As You Go, Instantly Adding to Your Material Library If the content you browse meets your expectations, you can save it to YouMind with one click, creating a personal material library . In this process, you can collect and organize information by topic, ultimately achieving thematic information creation and output. 4. Intelligent Exploration for Faster Initiation When you face a new topic and don't know how to start, YouMind offers a "New Board" feature. Just enter a general idea in the input box, and the AI will understand and break down your intent, automatically searching for relevant information and generating a summary report, allowing you to initiate research at a lower cost. 5. Information Processing to Transform Waste into Treasure Once you import all content into YouMind and open your Board, you can adjust and reorganize the information. During this process, our Assistant continuously summarizes and extracts information, highlighting key points. This way, you not only complete the collection of thematic materials but also lay the foundation for creation and sharing. With YouMind, everything becomes so easy. Of course, in the AI era, the challenges we face extend beyond just information acquisition and processing. While the capabilities of tools have improved, this also raises the bar for our ability to master new tools. We hope that through YouMind, users can have a simpler, more natural way to adapt to the changing times. We also hope that with YouMind, every knowledge worker can better cope with the new era and find the most critical information amid the tide of AI and information, thus confidently facing new challenges.