In summary
Meta Note helps editors and assistant editors receive production notes with timecode, frame rate, source role, and department context so notes can become useful markers, review cues, or searchable editorial context.
Timecode and frame rate help post teams find the part of the footage a note describes.
Role and department tagging clarifies whether a note came from script, production, or a department lead.
Structured notes are easier to turn into post-production markers than loose notes or chat threads.
What editors need from production notes
Editors do not need more unstructured text. They need notes that explain what moment matters, who flagged it, and how to find it. Without timing and source context, even a good note can become expensive to interpret.
How assistant editors use the handoff
Assistant editors often become the first people asked to turn set information into usable editorial structure. Meta Note is designed to make that handoff cleaner by preserving timing, frame rate, role, and department data with the note itself.
Why timecode, frame rate, and source context matter
Timecode points to the moment. Frame rate keeps timing assumptions explicit. Source role and department context explain why the note exists. Together, those details help post-production teams decide what to review, what to ignore, and what to turn into a marker.
Frequently asked questions
How does Meta Note help editors? It gives editors notes with timing and source context so the notes can become useful timeline markers or review cues.
How does Meta Note help assistant editors? It reduces the interpretation work required when set notes arrive in post because the note keeps timecode, frame rate, role, and department context.
Can Meta Note export to an NLE? Meta Note supports DaVinci Resolve workflows today, with Premiere Pro, Avid Media Composer, and Final Cut Pro support planned.