Mono is a place for the little things
you'd otherwise forget.
A quiet daily page for posts, notes, and to-dos.
The mess we started from.
A thought to keep. A task to remember. A note you'll want again next week. Each one lives in a different app, with a different shape, with its own folders to maintain.
By the time you've picked the right app, the thought is already gone.
One page per day.
Mono starts with a date and a blank page. Whatever you write, post, or check off lands on that page. Tomorrow gets its own page. Yesterday is still there when you want it.
No naming. No filing. No deciding where it belongs.
Posts, notes, tasks — same surface.
You shouldn't have to know what something is before you can write it down. Capture it first. Bundle the ones that belong together into a note later, if you want.
The quiet part.
Mono isn't productivity software. It's a place that sits with you — somewhere your day quietly accumulates, ready to be flipped back through when you need it.
Where it's going.
Today, Mono is in closed beta on TestFlight. Next: public App Store release, then a Mac app, then a small web companion. Pro syncs your pages between devices.