That’s the whole loop. Below, each step, and what we’ve built to make it feel like less than an app.
Most days, evervoice shows a single prompt. Sometimes it’s from the app. Sometimes it’s from your daughter, asking about the year you lived in Rome. Sometimes it’s the silence of a prompt you already answered.
There is no streak. There is no badge. If today is not the day, close the app.
Tap the prompt and you’re recording. A warm circle pulses gently with your voice. There’s a timer — 30 seconds is a memory, 3 minutes is a story — but it never cuts you off.
Tap the circle again to stop. Stopping is saving. There’s no “review” screen, no modal asking if you’re sure.
After the recording saves, you get a quiet sheet: assign this memory to Kids, Spouse, Extended, Friends — or keep it just for you. Tap one circle, tap “not now,” or tap “don’t ask again.”
Circles are private containers. Sam will never know you have a circle for your sister. Your kids can’t see what you wrote for your spouse.
Sometimes you want to say something now and deliver it later. Record a memory, pick a date — a wedding, an 18th birthday, the day someone becomes a parent — and it’s sealed with a wax seal until then.
Capsules are always visible in your archive, with a small count of days remaining. They open on the date, whether or not you’re still around.
A close friend or family member can record a memory about you — something you’d want remembered that you couldn’t have said yourself — and offer it to your archive.
You get a quiet notification. You listen. You decide: accept into a circle, accept privately, or decline.
Everything else — search, playlists, transcripts — is out of the way, found when you need it.
Coming soon