Stop abandoning task apps. Acre captures for you.
Acre reads your active context and surfaces tasks before manual entry defeats you.
The problem
ADHD makes manual entry into a wall. You open the app, you know you have something to add, and structuring it from scratch is enough to make you close it. The task disappears. The sticky note gets buried. The workaround stops working.
“ADHD users abandon task apps because manual entry defeats them.”
“Current workarounds (sticky notes, Notion) require executive function they lack.”
How it works
Acre passively captures context from your active screen and auto-structures it into tasks without you typing anything.
Passive capture
Acre reads what you're doing and pulls out tasks before you have to decide to write them down.
Auto-structure
Raw fragments become organized, dated tasks with no categorization work from you.
Zero typing required
Confirm with one tap or let Acre add it automatically. The app handles the executive function.
Different becauseNotion requires you to structure everything yourself. Sticky notes vanish. Acre captures and structures context passively, so the app works even when you cannot.
What's inside
- 01
Passive context capture
Acre monitors what you're actively working on and extracts tasks you haven't gotten around to writing down yet.
- 02
Auto-structure
Fragments, half-sentences, and browser tab titles become clean, actionable tasks without any sorting or labeling from you.
- 03
Zero typing add
One tap, a spoken word, or complete silence. Every capture path requires the minimum possible executive function.
- 04
Context tagging
Every task remembers where it came from: the tab, the document, the conversation that triggered it.
- 05
ADHD-native design
Built around actual ADHD attention patterns, not the fiction of consistent daily planning.
Built for
Marcus, 31, diagnosed ADHD
Marcus has downloaded and abandoned 11 task apps in the past three years. He knows what he needs to do. Getting it out of his head and into a system, without losing the thread mid-sentence, is the part that breaks down every time.
You probably
- →You have a task in your head but typing it out kills the thought before you finish.
- →Your sticky notes are a graveyard of half-started ideas.
- →You've tried Notion, Todoist, and three others. You still forget things.
Pre-launch pricing
Free
Free
- +Passive capture for 3 apps
- +Manual task add via widget
- +7-day task history
Founder
Founder
- +Unlimited passive capture
- +Auto-structure across all apps
- +Context tagging
- +Priority feature input
✓ 30-day money-back. No questions asked.
Pre-Order
Pre-Order
- +Lifetime access to all features
- +Early access before public launch
- +Direct line to the build team
- +All future updates included
✓ 30-day money-back. No questions asked.
Questions
Acre reads only what you choose to share with it. You control which apps and windows it can access, and nothing is sent off-device without your explicit permission.
Acre does not replace your existing system. It captures what falls through the cracks before tasks disappear, then surfaces them wherever you already work.
Most task apps assume you will remember to open them and have the bandwidth to type. Acre assumes you won't. That is the difference.
We're in closed development. Waitlist members get early access and direct input on which features ship first.
Yes. The free tier is permanent. Paid tiers unlock deeper context capture and integrations.
macOS first, then Windows. Mobile follow-on depends on what the early cohort tells us they need.
Task text and context metadata, stored locally by default. Cloud sync is opt-in and encrypted.
Why this exists
Acre exists because ADHD adults deserve a task system that works the way their attention actually does.
Passive context-reading is finally accurate enough to be useful without being intrusive.
Built by a small team with ADHD who abandoned their own task apps one too many times.
Reach us: hello@waitlist.solutions
Vote
Help shape the build
How many planners have you bought and stopped using?
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What usually makes you abandon a planning system?
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