Single-task focus
Memor shows you one task at a time. Not a list. Not a board. One thing, right now. The rest exists, but it is not competing for your attention.
The problem
Most task management apps are designed for brains that work in straight lines: consistent energy, clean priorities, and a guilt-free relationship with completion. If your brain works that way, you have hundreds of apps to choose from.
If it does not, you have a problem. The infinite scrolling list makes everything feel equally urgent. The overdue badge turns every deferred task into a small failure. The daily planner assumes you can predict how you will feel at 2 p.m. tomorrow. The app that was supposed to help becomes another source of friction.
Memor starts from the opposite set of assumptions. Your energy varies. Your focus shifts. Deferring a task is a legitimate decision, not a character flaw. And showing you one thing at a time, matched to your current capacity, is more useful than showing you everything at once.
What it does
Memor shows you one task at a time. Not a list. Not a board. One thing, right now. The rest exists, but it is not competing for your attention.
The uPower system matches task suggestions to your current energy level. Low energy? Memor surfaces small, completable tasks. High focus window? It brings forward the work that needs sustained attention.
"Not now" is a first-class action in Memor. Deferring a task does not mark it overdue, does not trigger a notification, and does not count against you. It moves the task to a better time.
Two modes: Momentum (what you completed today) and Clarity (what you decided about, including deferrals). Both count as progress, because making a deliberate decision about a task is productive even when the decision is "later."
Join the waitlist and we will be in touch when the beta opens.
Frequently asked
Memor is designed around the specific challenges of ADHD and executive dysfunction, but anyone who struggles with traditional task management may find it useful. The design principles, particularly single-task focus and guilt-free deferral, are broadly applicable.
Memor is in active development. Waitlist members will be the first to know when early access opens. We do not have a fixed date because we would rather ship something good than ship something on time.
Yes. Memor is being built as a mobile-first application for iOS and Android. A mobile device is where most people encounter their task list in the moments that matter.
Fair question. The difference is in the assumptions. Most task apps assume you are a well-organised person who needs a place to put your tasks. Memor assumes you are a capable person whose brain handles executive function differently, and it designs around that reality instead of pretending it does not exist.