nxt - Talk to your to do list and get what's next
nxt is the AI task manager you talk to like a human assistant.
Brain-dump your thoughts in plain language - nxt reads between the lines, extracts tasks, infers priorities, and files everything automatically. It understands what you mean, not just what you say. nxt learns your personal context, so your tasks flex around your life.
When you're ready to act, nxt cuts through the noise and gives you one clear task, one reason why. No scrolling, no paralysis, no overwhelming list to wade through.

Replies
Magic Bookshelf - AI Stories
QApilot's CoWork
This is promising. Curious if I can collaborate with my team or friends to create shared tasks or checklists. Congratulations on your launch.
Magic Bookshelf - AI Stories
@charan_tej_kammara Collaboration isn't in the app yet, but it's firmly on the roadmap - the plan is to let you share specific tasks or lists with another user, or assign tasks to them directly. Given how much of what ends up in a brain dump is "things I need someone else to do," it felt like a natural next step.
Would love to have you along for the ride as we build it out!
QApilot's CoWork
@heather_a_perkins - Got it. Looking forward to seeing how the product evolves.
I've abandoned probably 6 task managers at the exact stage you describe, organizing became the task. the "one task, one reason" framing is the first pitch in this category I've actually believed in a while. trying it today
Magic Bookshelf - AI Stories
@yarslav Thank you! Really looking forward to hearing how you get on!
Magic Bookshelf - AI Stories
@sanad_shegem Thank you so much! Would love to know what you were building - always up for chatting with people who've wrestled with the same problem!
what happens when I disagree with the pick? Can I skip and get a second suggestion?
i wonder about the learning part. When nxt learns my personal context, does that happen from my task history alone, or can I tell it things directly, like my work hours or my energy patterns?
me being skeptical of AI apps lately, I appreciate the clear focus here. Where does my task data live?
Foyer
The "get what's next" framing is interesting because it implies the app is making prioritization decisions, not just surfacing tasks by due date. That's the actually hard part of any task system, knowing which of the 40 things on your list is the right one to start right now given context, energy, and dependencies. Curious whether nxt is doing genuine prioritization reasoning or whether "talk to your to do list" mostly means natural language input and query. Also wondering how it handles tasks without clear deadlines or urgency signals, since those tend to be the ones that rot at the bottom of every list forever.
Magic Bookshelf - AI Stories
@fberrez1 It's genuine prioritisation reasoning, not just smart input. nxt builds up a picture of you over time: your habits, your schedule, your energy patterns, what you've been putting off. Then it uses all of that to decide what's actually right to do right now, not just what's overdue.
The rotting tasks problem is one I find personally infuriating, so it was high on the list to solve. Tasks without deadlines get surfaced based on context rather than urgency: a free 20 minutes, the right location, the right headspace. They don't just sit there gathering dust.
An example from yesterday: mid-morning, working from home, nxt suggested a small house chore with reasoning "take a 10 min break, move around, knock this off your list." I wouldn't have thought to do it. But it was exactly right. That's the kind of thing we're going for - not just what's urgent, but what's right for right now.
We're early, so it keeps getting smarter, and I would love to know if the reasoning lands the way you'd hope once you try it!
The "one clear task, one reason why" framing is what actually caught me. For me the failure point in every task manager was never capture, it was the decision paralysis of staring at a 40-item list and abandoning it. Two genuine questions: when I brain-dump a rambling voice note with five half-formed thoughts in it, does nxt split that into separate tasks or treat one recording as one task? And how transparent is the "reason why" — is it surfacing the deadline/priority it inferred, or my stated context (heads-down week, travelling)? Keeping that recommendation from feeling like a black box seems like the whole ballgame. Congrats on the launch.
Magic Bookshelf - AI Stories
@hung_tran_from_notebook_os Thank you! And yes, decision paralysis over the list is exactly the problem we're solving for.
Brain dumps are my jam too - I free-ramble through my mental checklist at nxt all the time. Once I even decided to get all the house maintenance jobs in, so I just went room to room and narrated everything I could see that needed sorting!
nxt takes those brain-dump voice notes and splits them into discrete tasks, then applies real-world knowledge to fill in the gaps: how long something is likely to take, whether it's high energy or something you can do on autopilot, whether it's the kind of thing that should repeat and on what schedule. Then it layers in everything it knows about you - your schedule, your habits, how your life works. Are you away this week? Are the kids off school? By the time the tasks land on your list, they have a sensible title, a context-filled description, and practical prioritisation and scheduling - all of which you can tweak if needed.
On transparency: the reason is specific, not generic. It shows its working rather than just handing you a task and expecting trust.
Would love your take on whether the reasoning feels genuinely useful once you've had a go!
I absolutely love the explicit 'ADHD friendly' tag on your launch assets. From a Go-To-Market perspective, did you find that leaning heavily into neurodivergent accessibility and minimizing cognitive overload helped you cut through the noise of the crowded productivity space faster?
Magic Bookshelf - AI Stories
@andika_fadhilah Great question! Honestly, reducing cognitive overload wasn't a conscious GTM decision as much as it was baked into how we built it - the thing we found is that in this space, for the problem we are looking to solve, what's good for neurodivergent users is just good design for everyone. One task at a time, no overwhelming lists, celebrating wins - these things help all of us, not just a specific group. The ADHD friendly badge felt like an honest reflection of that rather than a positioning play.
Curious whether you think leading with it more explicitly would resonate - we've gone back and forth on it!