The other eight scatter across Notes, Voice Memos, Reminders, screenshots, and the back of your head. You never see most of them again. Daisy is one button. Hold it, say anything, let go. Daisy remembers who, where, when, and what it was about, so you can find any of them by any thread.
You are walking to lunch and a thought lands. The good ones always land at the wrong moment. Open Daisy. Hold the button. Let it out.
Apple Notes treats every note as a self-contained document. Voice Memos forgets what you said the moment you stop talking. Reminders only fires what you explicitly told it to fire. Each tool is good. None of them remembers your thinking.
Daisy is built around the connections, not the entries. Every capture knows who it was about, where you were, when it happened, what topic it touches. You search by any of those threads and find every related thought. The graph is the product.
The first build, shipping to TestFlight this summer, is the substrate. Voice capture, smart classification, the entity graph, time and location reminders. It is already useful on day one.
The deeper promise comes next. Daisy will surface the right memory at the right moment, before you remember to look. You captured a note about Sarah's birthday three months ago. Sarah calls. Daisy quietly reminds you. You wondered about a book at the coffee shop in March. You walk past that shop again. Daisy brings the thought back. That is the second brain we are actually building. The first version makes it possible. The next makes it personal.
Daisy runs on the iPhone's own intelligence. Speech, classification, search, embeddings, all on device. No servers between you and your thoughts. No analytics. No telemetry. If you ever want a cloud assist (for harder languages, older devices), you opt in, you bring your own key, and you can turn it off at any time.
Daisy is going to TestFlight this summer with a small first cohort. If you want to be one of the people shaping how it behaves before it lands in the App Store, leave your email. You will get a single message when the invite is ready. Nothing else.
"I want Daisy to remember the thoughts I almost lost."
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