Mori - A private AI memory for your Mac.

by
Mori is a private AI memory companion for macOS. Instead of making you copy conversations into ChatGPT every time, Mori remembers what you choose to save, then helps you rewrite, summarize, draft replies, and recall context from anywhere with a single shortcut (⌥ + M). Everything is stored locally by default, and AI is only used when you explicitly generate. Built for people who spend their day writing across email, Slack, X, Discord, Notion, and every text field on their Mac.

Add a comment

Replies

Best
Maker
📌
Most AI tools are powerful, but they still make you stop, copy everything over, explain the context again, and then bring the answer back into the app you were using. I built Mori to remove that friction. Press ⌥M anywhere on your Mac, bring in the text you are working with, and Mori helps you draft, rewrite, summarize, or recall what matters—without turning every task into a new chat. Mori is intentionally local-first. Memories stay on your Mac by default, AI only receives context when you choose to generate, and you can use your own provider key. This is still an early beta, so I’m launching it here to learn from real Mac users: where the shortcut feels magical, where capture or insertion breaks, and what Mori should remember next. Really excited to share this first version with the Orynth community. 🌱

How does the local storage actually work when you bring in AI for the rewrite or summarize step, does any of that content ever leave the Mac or is it all routed through your own API keys?

The ⌥ + M shortcut choice is genuinely clever. Feels like something that would take a team a lot of small decisions to get right, and the local-by-default stance shows real respect for how people actually want their data handled.

finally something that doesnt nuke my clipboard history, the opt+m shortcut works pretty much anywhere i tried. local storage was the selling point for me

The local storage approach is what sold me on this, way less anxiety about my drafts and notes leaving my machine. The ⌥+M shortcut actually works wherever I’d expect it to, which is rare.