Transcript intelligence
Surface the moments worth building around, preserve the reasoning, and keep timestamps close enough for an editor to act.
Video development agent
Athabasca is being built to help creators, editors, and researchers move from footage, transcripts, notes, and reference material into a crisp creative brief, story structure, clip map, and production-ready editing direction.
Early access will be small and hands-on while the workflow is still taking shape.
Current task
Find the strongest story arc from 90 minutes of source material.candidate moments
narrative beats
editing brief
Agent output
Hook, context, conflict, payoff, cut list, and follow-up questions.What it is for
Surface the moments worth building around, preserve the reasoning, and keep timestamps close enough for an editor to act.
Shape raw material into hooks, arcs, objections, payoffs, and sequences that can survive the trip from concept to timeline.
Move beyond generic summaries into concrete cut plans, clip candidates, missing assets, and notes for the next production pass.
Final form
The long-term goal is not another chat box beside your editing process. Athabasca is meant to become a development layer that understands the source, tracks the creative thesis, compares options, and hands off specific next actions.
Video links, local footage, transcripts, notes, references, and rough direction.
Analyze moments, find tension, build structures, and generate testable approaches.
Creative brief, cut list, selected moments, asset gaps, and editor-ready instructions.
Private draft access
Athabasca is early. The first people invited will help shape the practical workflow: what inputs matter, what outputs are worth trusting, and where the agent should stay out of the way.