The fastest way to understand Working Memory is to send it something and then ask for it back. Two minutes, start to finish.
Step 1: Open the composer
Open the app. You'll land directly on the composer — a single input with a microphone button next to it. There's no inbox to sort, no folders to choose. Same place every time.
Step 2: Say or type one thing
Tap the microphone and say something with a date in it. Try:
"Remind me to call Sam tomorrow at 9."
When you let go, the app transcribes what you said and saves it. A moment later, a reminder appears on the timeline below — "Call Sam, tomorrow at 9:00 AM."
You didn't have to mark it as a reminder. The app worked out that "remind me" plus a time meant you wanted a nudge, and set one. Tomorrow at 9, you'll get a push notification on your phone.
If you'd rather type than talk, the text field works the same way. Voice or text — same composer, same behaviour.
Step 3: Ask it back
Now the other half. Send a new message:
"What did I say about Sam?"
The app looks across everything you've ever told it and pulls back what's relevant — the call you scheduled, plus anything else about Sam you'd mentioned. The original thought, with its date and context, comes back to you.
That's the loop. Capture. Recall. You don't have to maintain anything in between.
What to try next
Anything you'd otherwise text yourself works here. A few that work well:
- "Mom's birthday is March 5." — saved as a fact you can ask about later.
- "Groceries: bread, milk, eggs." — captured as a list, retrievable when you're at the shop.
- "Remind me to follow up with Priya Friday." — a reminder, scheduled.
- "Lucca's was the best meal of the year, per Sarah." — a quote, attached to a person and a place.
- "Q3 numbers — margin compression about 4 points." — a note you can pull up in the next meeting.
The thing to know: you don't have to phrase any of these in a special way. Just say what you'd say to a friend who happens to remember everything.
A note on how it figures things out
The app reads your message and decides on its own whether it's a fact to remember, a reminder to schedule, a list to track, or something to act on. If it gets the structure wrong, you can correct it in the message — just say "actually that's next Friday, not this one" and it'll update.
Where to go next
- Voice messages — what works, how long they can be, what happens to the audio.
- Reminders — how scheduling works, how to change or cancel.
- Asking questions — getting better answers out of your memory.