Memoify is an offline-first task planner for people who plan their day in minutes, not in lists.

Most task apps assume you have infinite time and an internet connection. Memoify assumes neither. It runs in your browser, stores your tasks in a local PostgreSQL database that lives on your device, and works the same way whether you're on a flight, on the subway, or on a flaky hotel Wi-Fi. When you come back online, your tasks sync quietly in the background.

Why offline-first

Tools that depend on a network round-trip for every click feel sluggish even when they work, and they stop working entirely when the network doesn't. Memoify inverts that: every write hits the local database first, so adding a task, starting a timer, or reordering your day is instant. Syncing to the cloud is a background concern, not a blocking one.

The same design makes Memoify installable. On desktop or mobile, you can add it to your home screen and launch it like a native app. It opens in its own window, keeps its state between sessions, and doesn't need a browser tab open to work.

Built around duration, not deadlines

Most planners ask when you'll do something. Memoify asks how long it will take. Every task has a duration, and the app is organized around a single prominent countdown timer at the top of the page. You pick a task, start the timer, and the app tracks the time you spent — automatically splitting what's done from what's left.

This is useful if you already practice time-boxing, Pomodoro, or any form of focused work. It's also useful if you don't, because it quietly teaches you how long things actually take you. Over a few days, your estimates get sharper. Over a few weeks, your plans get realistic.

Who it's for

Memoify is for people who want a calm, focused place to plan the next few hours of their day. It's not a project management tool for teams of fifty. It's not a note-taking app with tasks bolted on. It's a task planner that takes planning — and finishing — seriously.

You can use it entirely privately (data stays on your device) or sign in to sync across devices and share collections with collaborators. The app doesn't push you toward either choice.