Publishable local source files
Each participant records locally, so the remote interview studio workflow is optimized for the files you need after the conversation, not just the live call.
Remote Interview Studio
Airtape helps teams run a remote interview studio with higher confidence because the recording happens locally instead of depending on network quality alone. That means a brief dropout or unstable connection is far less likely to damage the usable final track.
This makes Airtape useful for editorial interviews, executive conversations, recruiting interviews, customer research, and media appearances that need to be preserved in high quality. The goal is not just to host the live call. It is to ensure the recorded result is something you can actually publish or archive.
Each participant records locally, so the remote interview studio workflow is optimized for the files you need after the conversation, not just the live call.
Guests can join directly from the browser, which reduces setup friction before executive or editorial interviews.
Producers get independent files for cleanup, trimming, and multi-angle edits instead of a single compromised recording.
Hosts send a browser link, brief the guest, and start the call without asking anyone to install software. During the conversation, Airtape captures each participant locally and keeps the live session moving.
After the interview, the team works from separate source files instead of trying to rescue artifacts caused by network compression. That is the difference between a remote interview studio and a generic video meeting workflow.
Editorial teams need publishable footage, recruiting teams need reliable archives, and customer teams need conversations they can safely review later. A remote interview studio has to support all three without becoming bloated or hard to run.
Airtape keeps the setup simple for guests while still giving the host the recording quality and post-call control that higher-stakes interview workflows need.
Because Airtape records locally, a brief connection issue is much less likely to ruin the usable source file than it would in a network-dependent meeting recording.
Yes. Airtape keeps the guest experience browser-based and link-driven so the host can run a production-minded workflow without adding setup friction.