Launching today
WizeMe.APP: Personal Life Partner OS
Private AI memory for clearer decisions and follow-through
43 followers
Private AI memory for clearer decisions and follow-through
43 followers
WizeMe.APP is a private thinking partner that remembers the context you choose to keep across conversations, decisions, relationships, and daily rituals. Morning Brief and Nightly De-brief keep the day connected. Visual Mirror shows evidence, confidence, and source gaps, then learns from your feedback. Decision Briefs and Hard-Talk Prep turn reflection into action. Memory stays permissioned, source-labeled, and exportable. Start free for 14 days.













Love the concept of a thinking partner that actually retains context, the Morning Brief and Visual Mirror sound genuinely useful rather than gimmicky. One thing that would make me trust it more: a clear timeline view showing exactly what was remembered, edited, or forgotten each week, so I can audit the memory layer the same way I review a credit card statement.
@gullu60488 That instinct — audit it like a statement — is exactly the right one for anything holding memory about you, and I want to answer precisely rather than round up to "yes, we have that."
What's actually there today: memory is source-labeled at ingestion — notes, recordings, threads, documents, uploads all carry where they came from, and if something wasn't loaded, the partner says so rather than pretending. You can say forget this and a specific item is gone, not soft-hidden. And you can ask in-conversation to audit the last three turns for a blind spot — a live check on what it's actually using, in the moment.
What's not there yet, honestly: a dedicated weekly timeline view — remembered/edited/forgotten, laid out the way a statement lays out transactions. Right now the audit trail exists as labels on the memory itself and point-in-time checks you ask for, not as one rolled-up view you'd open and scan.
That's a real, specific gap, not a small one — a statement view is a different thing than "ask and it'll tell you." The primitives to build it are already there (everything's source-labeled, everything's forgettable), it's a surfacing problem, not a data problem. Worth putting on the list with your name on it.
@gullu60488 Update for accuracy: Weekly Pattern Scan is live — it's the feature I was describing, correctly named this time. (I called it "Weekly Throughline" in a reply further down this thread; same underlying mechanism, I was sloppy with the name, not the mechanism.) It looks across recent nightly closes and surfaces a repeated loop, blind spot, or decision drift only when the signal is strong enough — not a forced weekly report regardless of whether anything's there.
The digest-delivery layer on top of it — one user-controlled weekly email/Telegram/push summary — is what I'm building now.
Loving the Visual Mirror concept, especially the idea of seeing confidence and source gaps side by side. One thing I'd love is a weekly digest email that summarizes the patterns the app noticed, like recurring blind spots or decisions I kept postponing, so I can review my own thinking trends without having to open the app every day.
@n_lok72335 You’re describing exactly where WizeMe’s Weekly Pattern Scan is headed. The partners already identify recurring blind spots, postponed decisions, and behavioral patterns, and WizeMe’s opt-in notification layer supports email, Telegram, and push. I’m tightening those pieces into one user-controlled weekly digest, with source boundaries and no silent inbox access or unapproved sending.
"life partner OS" is a big claim for what's essentially a private memory layer for decisions. the hard part with these isn't storing the memory, it's the app actually surfacing the right past decision at the right moment instead of turning into a journal nobody reopens. how does the follow-through part actually get triggered
@omri_ben_shoham1 Fair pressure, and you're right that storage was never the hard part.
Here's the actual mechanism. It's not a background job quietly deciding to interrupt you — it's a structural loop you run, not one WizeMe runs at you:
The night-to-morning bridge. Nightly De-brief asks one question — "how did today land?" — and structures whatever you say into open loops, decisions, people, and one tomorrow-intention. Whatever you leave open comes back in the next Morning Brief, by name. Not searched for. Not buried in a list you have to open. It's re-surfaced in the one place you're already looking at the start of the day.
That's the trigger: you closing yesterday is what queues what shows up tomorrow. The loop is user-paced, not push-based — there's no silent notification deciding for you what's important. If you skip a night, it bridges the gap without guilt or streak-shaming; nothing punishes you for not feeding it.
Above that sits Weekly Throughline — it looks for a repeated loop, a decision you keep drifting on, a pattern across several nightly closes — and it only surfaces when the signal is actually strong enough. That's the deliberate answer to your exact worry: it's built to not resurface noise. If nothing repeats clearly, it says nothing, rather than manufacturing a pattern to justify existing.
So the honest shape of it: this is not omniscient proactive surfacing — it's not going to interrupt you mid-afternoon with "hey, remember that thing." It's a daily structural rhythm — close the loop at night, get it back by name in the morning — plus a weekly pattern check that stays quiet unless the evidence is real.
The fair name for the risk you're naming: it only works if you're in the daily rhythm. Skip the nightly close for two weeks and there's less for it to bridge — same as any partner that needs you talking to it to know what matters. That's a real tradeoff, not a solved problem, and I'd rather say that than pretend it isn't.
Tried the Morning Brief and was surprised how quickly it picked up on context from earlier chats without me having to repeat myself. The source labels on each insight made it feel private and trustworthy.