How-to guides
How to record your meetings
Pick your platform and operating system. Each guide walks through recording a call by hand with the tools you already have, covers the audio settings that trip people up, and then shows the faster automatic route. Every guide works whether or not you install Autorec.
Record a Zoom meeting on Linux
Capture a Zoom call on Linux, including the audio from everyone in the room, using OBS or an automatic recorder.
Record a Zoom meeting on Windows
Capture a Zoom call on Windows with both sides of the audio, using the Game Bar, OBS, or an automatic recorder.
Record a Microsoft Teams meeting on Linux
Teams dropped its native Linux app. Here is how to record a Teams call on Linux anyway, with full audio.
Record a Microsoft Teams meeting on Windows
Record a Teams call on Windows to your own disk, with both sides of the audio and a transcript.
Record a Google Meet call on Linux
Google Meet's own recording is paywalled. Here is how to record a Meet call on Linux with full audio instead.
Record a Google Meet call on Windows
Record a Google Meet call on Windows to your own disk, with both sides of the audio and a transcript.
Record a Zoom meeting without a bot
Skip the notetaker bot that joins as a guest. Record a Zoom call from your own desktop instead.
Record a Google Meet call without a bot
Skip the notetaker guest that joins your Meet call. Record it from your own desktop instead.
Record any meeting on Linux
A platform-agnostic guide to recording video calls on Linux, including the audio routing that catches everyone out.
Stop setting up recordings by hand
Autorec watches for Zoom, Teams, and Google Meet calls, records them locally, and transcribes them on your machine. Free tier: 3 recordings per day, 40 minutes each.