Decision Support · Side-by-side
Compare pricing, strengths, and use cases so it is easier to pick the right fit.
Change tools
For teams that live in Google Calendar and need structured meeting workflows with task management integration, Fellow is the clear winner. For individuals who want a private, bot-free meeting summary tool that works offline and across languages, Jamie is the better pick. The single biggest difference: Fellow is a full meeting management platform for teams, while Jamie is a personal AI note-taker that doesn't require a bot in your calls.
Fellow
Jamie
Scores at a glance
Choose Fellow if
Choose Jamie if
Key differences
Facts side by side
| Fellow | Jamie | |
|---|---|---|
| Free plan | ||
| Mobile app | ||
| API access |
Common questions
Neither tool has a mobile app. Fellow is web-based and works in a mobile browser, but it's clunky. Jamie is desktop-only (macOS/Windows) and cannot be used on a phone at all.
Jamie is the clear winner for privacy. It runs locally on your computer, is GDPR compliant, and doesn't require a bot to join your meetings. Fellow uses a cloud bot that records and transcribes your calls.
Yes. Fellow is built for teams — you can co-edit agendas, assign action items, and track meeting outcomes together. Jamie is a personal tool with no collaboration features.
Jamie is easier. You download the app, grant permissions, and it starts working. Fellow requires 10 onboarding steps including connecting calendars, setting up bots, and configuring integrations.
Yes. Jamie captures audio from your computer's microphone or system audio, so it works with any meeting app — including Zoom — without needing a bot to join the call.
Fellow's free tier is more generous for one person, but its paid plan starts at $7/month. Jamie's free tier is very limited, and the paid plan is €21/month — so Fellow is cheaper for a single paid user.
Fellow wins for teams that need structured meeting workflows; Jamie wins for individuals who want private, bot-free, multilingual summaries.
If you're part of a team that uses project management tools and wants to turn meetings into trackable work, go with Fellow — it's worth the setup effort. If you're a solo professional who values privacy, works across many platforms, or needs multilingual summaries, Jamie is simpler and more flexible. Both lack mobile apps, so plan to use them from a laptop.