Rohan Chaubey

Velo 2.0 - Instantly turn your voice and screen into shareable videos

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Velo 2.0 is a whole new way to make video messages. It turns raw screen recordings into polished videos and docs, with a chat-native editor, real-time processing, voice cloning, and smart script rewriting. Edit by chatting, not timelines. Record once and get both a video and a doc. Write a script even when there is no audio. Change tone anytime. Everything updates live, so the whole experience feels faster, easier, and more natural.

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Madalina B

Congratulations! Looks great

Sourav Sanyal
@madalina_barbu thank you
Madalina B

Congratulations! Looks great

Sourav Sanyal

@madalina_barbu Thank you

Muhammad Ega

"Edit by chatting, not timelines" is the kind of mental-model rewrite that's either obvious in hindsight or never catches on. Right now it feels obvious, most knowledge workers don't know what a J-cut is, but everyone knows how to ask "trim the awkward pause at 0:43."

The dual-output thing (video + docs from one recording) is underrated. That's almost a separate product. Async-team async-onboarding-doc is a real wedge.

Curious: do power users hit a ceiling with chat-only editing, or does the AI eventually expose granular controls when it detects "this user knows what they want"?

Sourav Sanyal

@muhammadegaa When you want to go deeper we have a full blown editor with everything you need within the product

Madza

Congrats on the launch, this is awesome!

Sourav Sanyal

@madzadev Thank you so much

Kritika Mehta
Velo adds voice even when a video doesn’t originally have one. Isn’t there a possibility of misuse by kidnappers creating fake videos, or even by people targeting high-profile politicians? Doesn’t this contribute to the rise of deepfakes? Have you implemented any safeguards to detect or prevent threatening or harmful scripts?
Martius Juokemefa

Video messages are underrated for async communication - there's something about seeing a real face that text just can't replicate, especially when you're trying to explain something nuanced without scheduling yet another meeting. Curious how the sharing experience works on the receiving end for people who don't have the app. Is it just a link they open in browser?

Angga Jiyan Fajar Imanuddin

I'm so curious how it handles more complex edit, like trimming specific sections or adjusting timing. Does it still feel intuitive, or do some things still need a traditional timeline?