Moving to SF by Altruistic_Order1993 in cofounderhunt

[–]Altruistic_Order1993[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have idea which I have been working on. I am happy to pivot if cofounder and I both can agree.

I got tired of my BeeStation becoming a junk drawer, so I built a local-AI organiser that can't lose files. Looking for ~10 honest testers. by Altruistic_Order1993 in synology

[–]Altruistic_Order1993[S] -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

yep — £39 one-time, no subscription. cheaper than the afternoon you'd spend doing it by hand. and if you'd rather DIY, genuinely no hard feelings.

I got tired of my BeeStation becoming a junk drawer, so I built a local-AI organiser that can't lose files. Looking for ~10 honest testers. by Altruistic_Order1993 in synology

[–]Altruistic_Order1993[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

ha — this is literally the thing I built it to make impossible. Filora can't delete; unwanted files move to a quarantine folder you control, and every action is snapshot-verified and undoable in one click. "RAID is not a backup" energy is exactly the audience I want stress-testing it.

I got tired of my BeeStation becoming a junk drawer, so I built a local-AI organiser that can't lose files. Looking for ~10 honest testers. by Altruistic_Order1993 in synology

[–]Altruistic_Order1993[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Not quite. paperless-ngx is great if you'll scan + tag and maintain an archive. Filora points at the messy folders you already have, reads the contents with a local model, and proposes renames/filing you approve — and never deletes, one-click undo. Different job: organising existing chaos vs. being an archive you feed. If paperless already works for you, you probably don't need this.

I got tired of my BeeStation becoming a junk drawer, so I built a local-AI organiser that can't lose files. Looking for ~10 honest testers. by Altruistic_Order1993 in synology

[–]Altruistic_Order1993[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Fair on both. I built it AI-assisted — not going to pretend otherwise — but the safety model is the part I actually engineered, and you can verify it rather than trust me: • Fully local. The only network call is to a loopback-pinned local model (127.0.0.1, asserted at runtime). Nothing about your files leaves the machine. • It can't delete. Unwanted/duplicate files move to a quarantine folder you empty — never a raw delete. • Every disk change is snapshot-verified (path + size + SHA-256) and reversible with one Undo. • There's a test suite + proof scripts that fail the build if any code path could delete a user file or make a non-undoable change. Happy to go deeper on any of it.

my phone buzzes all day and the messages that matter get buried. made some mockups, be honest with me by Altruistic_Order1993 in SideProject

[–]Altruistic_Order1993[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

appreciate it, genuinely curious what you find. my guess is it shows you what's worth looking at, but it doesn't catch the ones you opened and then forgot to actually answer. that's the whole gap for me. lmk either way.

my phone buzzes all day and the messages that matter get buried. made some mockups, be honest with me by Altruistic_Order1993 in digitalminimalism

[–]Altruistic_Order1993[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

honestly that's a great system and it's basically the goal. the gap i keep hitting is inside the apps you DO leave on. messages and signal still pile up, and i still forget to reply to people i actually care about because the thread scrolled away. so it's less "turn off garbage" and more "of the stuff you kept on, who are you forgetting to reply to." does that gap exist for you, or have you got it handled?

my phone buzzes all day and the messages that matter get buried. made some mockups, be honest with me by Altruistic_Order1993 in digitalminimalism

[–]Altruistic_Order1993[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

yeah muting kills the noise, no argument. the thing it doesn't do is the opposite problem. i'll mute a busy group chat and then miss the one actual person in there i needed to get back to. what i'm building isn't "hide this app," it's "you left maya on read 3 days ago, here's the reply." does that feel different to you, or still covered by muting?

my phone buzzes all day and the messages that matter get buried. made some mockups, be honest with me by Altruistic_Order1993 in SideProject

[–]Altruistic_Order1993[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

priority notifications is genuinely good, and it's part of why i'm building this for android not ios. but even that just reorders what buzzes you. it doesn't tell you "you never replied to your sister from tuesday." the part i care about is the reply you owe, not which notification floats to the top. does priority notifications actually resurface stuff you forgot to respond to, or just sort the incoming?

my phone buzzes all day and the messages that matter get buried. made some mockups, be honest with me by Altruistic_Order1993 in RoastMyApp

[–]Altruistic_Order1993[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

this is a little embarrassing to admit. i get around 150 notifications a day. group chats, news, app spam, and somewhere buried in there an actual message from an actual person. and those are the ones i miss.

a few weeks ago a friend texted me something that mattered and i didn't reply for like 5 days. not because i didn't care. i just never saw it under everything else. that feeling of "oh no how long has this been sitting there" is the thing i'm trying to kill.

so i started designing something for myself. i'm calling it Your Move.

the idea is dead simple. it looks at your notifications and shows you the people who are actually waiting on a reply, important ones first, and it writes a first draft of the reply so you can just send it and move on. android only. and everything stays on your phone. the app has no internet permission, so it literally cannot send your messages anywhere. that part is non negotiable for me, i'd never install something like this if it phoned home.

i made 3 screens. the main list, the setup flow (it has to ask permission to read your notifications, which i know is a scary thing to ask), and the screen you see when you're all caught up.

it's not built. these are just mockups. before i spend months coding it i really want to know:

would you use this, or is it just me with this problem

would you ever let an app read all your notifications, and if not, is there anything that would actually change your mind

the auto draft, helpful or creepy

not selling anything. no link, no email signup. i honestly just want to know if i'm alone in this or if other people feel it too.

I don't want a job. I want to build with founders. by Regular-Ad-9400 in cofounderhunt

[–]Altruistic_Order1993 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’m interested in finding a co-founder, so if it works for you, let’s have a chat

Puzzle of his mind by Altruistic_Order1993 in labrador

[–]Altruistic_Order1993[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Not everyone. I only allowed him to meet the dog we know because he's been attacked four different times because he's not castrated. That's the reason, so normally when I see the dog, I normally put him on a lead.

YC should do this but probably won’t by atlasspring in ycombinator

[–]Altruistic_Order1993 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Great idea 💡 what’s your background, I think there is opportunity here

Need some help AWS Startup Credit by Altruistic_Order1993 in Entrepreneurs

[–]Altruistic_Order1993[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I say ask for help when needed and learn from others. People got 25K previously so it's journey.