It's able to mount a cloud / network services as a drive and works seamlessly with your operating system. Found it a bit slow compared to the native software for a cloud service like Google Drive File Stream. Also include native support for Cryptomator encrypted volumes.
Based on our record, Mountain Duck seems to be a lot more popular than HappyScribe. While we know about 44 links to Mountain Duck, we've tracked only 3 mentions of HappyScribe. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
Is Mountain Duck (https://mountainduck.io) still viable for this sort of thing? I use Dropbox, iCloud and GDrive but, it's inconsistent and a bit fractured. I've never looked into consolidation seriously. - Source: Hacker News / about 1 month ago
I've had a good experience with CyberDuck too. Recently I learned they also have MountainDuck for mounting remote storage: https://mountainduck.io/ I'm still excited to learn more about Rclone since it looks like a great way to sync the data across different cloud provider. - Source: Hacker News / 4 months ago
Edit: The more I try to Google this, the more it seems like it's more of a Mac software question than it's something I could easily enable by way of a docker-hosted solution. Something like Mountain Duck might do the trick. But I'll hold out a bit to see if anyone has a suggestion before I buy one of their $50 licenses. Source: 9 months ago
Not open source, but I had my work buy me a license for: https://mountainduck.io/ and I quite like it. - Source: Hacker News / 9 months ago
For a secure cloud storage setup, I use Cryptomator, accessible at https://cryptomator.org/, on my Android device, and Mountain Duck, available at https://mountainduck.io/, on my desktop. This configuration enables me to choose my own storage provider on a pay-as-you-go basis. My preferred storage provider is S3, mainly because it facilitates easy backup of cloud files on my NAS or via tools such as WinSCP, which... Source: 12 months ago
Happyscribe.com is quite nice for that, with automated voice recognition and a WYSIWYG interface for subtitling (though I've never used it with Russian). Source: over 1 year ago
I have just found happyscribe.com. I am trying it and it translated quite good. I have to change perhaps 10% of the words. Source: over 1 year ago
This is more of a question than an answer, but has anyone used an online audio transcription site to create an English transcription directly from a Spanish language audio podcast MP3 file? I was just looking into this this morning, and seems like there are some services out there that will do this, either for free for small files (10 min) or at what seems like a reasonable price. I was looking at veed.io,... Source: almost 2 years ago
RaiDrive - Mount NAS, Router, Google Drive, OneDrive and Dropbox to a network drive or file explorer.
Trint - Transcribe spoken words from your video & audio files
Rclone - rsync for cloud storage.
Sonix - Automatically convert audio & video to text in minutes
Cyberduck - A libre FTP, SFTP, WebDAV, S3, Backblaze B2, Azure & OpenStack Swift browser.
Audext - Use online audio to text converter to transcribe any voice recording in minutes.