Personal Work OS

Digital feng shui for your work.

Knowledge work fails in clutter. Threddo gives every task its own focused room—only the tools, links, and notes that belong there—so you can start fast, stay present, and come back tomorrow with instant context. Starting a time block quietly declares intent: this task (and its subtasks), nothing else.

No install · Works on all major desktop browsers

Keep momentum, lose the noise. Every session is a focused space—no extras.

/Task-relevant slash commands keep apps, links & notes a keystroke away

Threddo is for you if…

You often start projects but lose momentum

Threddo keeps your place between sessions—review note, artifacts, and a clear next step—so you can pick up exactly where you left off.

MomentumCarryover

You struggle to get moving when you sit down

Starting a time block opens a clean, task-scoped space with just the right apps, links, and notes—so you begin without rummaging.

Restart frictionFocus

You want a quiet workspace that makes the next step obvious

The scratch surface resets each block (the good bits carry forward), while a focused recap + timeline turn “what now?” into “do this.”

ClarityNext step

How it works

1

Plan the thread

Sketch your work as a simple task tree. Add lightweight context—goals, blockers, resources.

2

Hit Start

A clean, time-boxed canvas opens. Everything you capture is auto-attached to the session.

3

Write a quick review

When the timer ends, jot what moved, what’s stuck, and the one next step. Prefer a head start? Draft with AI and edit.

4

Resume with momentum

Next time, Threddo reloads your notes, artifacts, and the next step so you’re moving in seconds.

Bicycle for your mind

The AI that actually helps

AI that’s tailored to how your brain works. Threddo scopes intelligence to your current task and session, so it amplifies attention instead of scattering it.

Session reviews serve a real psychological purpose: a short note consolidates what you just did and encodes your intent. When you return—minutes or weeks later—the recap and next step provide immediate recontextualisation, shrinking restart costs to seconds.

  • • Drafts your end-of-session review (you edit, it stays human).
  • • Suggests a single, unambiguous next step to avoid decision drag.
  • • Surfaces the exact artifacts and links you’ll need right now.
  • • Stays task-scoped—no chat soup, no inbox of distractions.

Included by default—no API keys to manage. You choose what gets summarised.

“Here’s where you left off”

Finished auth routes; started the artifact panel. Context cue: you parked on the drop target wiring.

Suggested next step

Create /api/artifacts and persist file refs to the current session.

Draft review (edit)

Scoped the drop area, validated image types, mocked upload. Blocked on presigned URLs. Next: wire API + retry flow.

Private by defaultResets each blockTask-scoped

Your private scratch surface

A dedicated space to jot freely. The canvas resets each block; the artifacts and insights carry forward.

During a session, you get a clean canvas that’s just for thinking out loud— type messy, paste screenshots, drop links, sketch half-ideas. When the block ends, you keep the signal—artifacts, a short review, and the next step—while the scratch surface resets for your next block. If you’ve ever used a private Slack DM just to jot something down, this is that idea—task-scoped and built for momentum.

  • Psychology-backed focus. Thinking out loud externalizes working memory, reduces cognitive load, and strengthens consolidation (the “generation effect”)—keeping attention tethered to the task.
  • Consolidate your thoughts. Capture the thread as it unfolds so your brain can focus on the next move.
  • From stream → structure. Promote snippets to tasks with /todo, save the good bits as resources/artifacts, and pin links via ⌘K.
  • Carryover without clutter. Artifacts and the review persist; the blank canvas returns next time.

Micro-tip: “Make a mess. We’ll keep the good bits.”

Scratch — 14:00–14:25

“User goal: reduce context switches”
/todo Add ⌘K “Context Dock” to hero
Pasted screenshot: flame chart v1
Link: /timeline copy draft
Carried over
artifact.pdf/todo: Context Docklink: brief
This canvas resets each block—your artifacts don’t.

Time, made visible.

A nested timeline of your session shows how your time flowed across subtasks—so reviews are clearer and tomorrow’s plan is obvious.

During a session, Threddo keeps one task active at a time and pauses other siblings. The result is a stacked view of where attention actually went—big blocks for the main task, smaller bars for the detours that supported it.

  • Instant recall. Shapes and nesting jog memory better than a wall of text.
  • Catch rabbit holes. See when a “five-minute check” became 25 and decide what to do.
  • True progress, not vibes. Talk about what moved with evidence, not guesswork.
  • Smarter estimates. Patterns across sessions make planning the next block easier.
  • Cleaner handoffs—to yourself. The timeline + review recontextualises you in seconds.
AutomaticSingle-threaded by design

(For the nerds: it’s like a call stack for your day—without the jargon in your way.)

Each bar = time on a subtask. Width shows duration; nesting shows depth.

Why it works (for real humans)

  • Intention first. Starting a time block quietly declares intent: you’re working on this task (and its subtasks), nothing else.
  • Boundaries & space. A time box plus a dedicated canvas limit scope creep and keep stray tabs out.
  • Less rummaging. Your tools show up where you work, not everywhere.
  • Fewer decisions. A smaller, task-scoped palette beats an everything-launcher.
  • Faster context. Space is pre-arranged for the work, not the other way around.
  • Clean transitions. A short human review locks in memory and intent.
  • Steady momentum. Resume with a crisp “where you left off.”

“Plan → Execute → Review → Resume.”

Threddo is a session-native web workspace. Progress is measured by time spent moving, not perfection.

Made for makers

Engineers

Spike ideas, pin PRs, and reopen the same dev setup with ⌘K. End with a one-line next step so tomorrow starts fast.

Designers

Keep Figma files, brand docs, and inspiration links scoped to the task. Paste snaps, jot rationale, and close with a short review.

Writers

Draft in bursts with references one keystroke away. Use /outline or /summarize, then capture a thesis + next paragraph as your review.

Researchers

Attach PDFs to the thread, pull highlights into the canvas, and let AI recap findings without losing citations or context.

PMs & consultants

Tie notes to tasks, not meetings. Launch the right doc set via ⌘K, then export a crisp /status recap.

Indies & founders

Plan sprints as threads, scope apps/links per initiative, and re-open the same environment daily for a dependable cadence.

FAQ

Is Threddo a notes app or a task manager?

Both—by design. Tasks give direction; notes capture reality. Threddo joins them at the point of work: your session. It can also replace your Pomodoro timer with built-in time-boxed sessions and an optional Pomodoro rhythm.

Why is this a web app and not native?

We agree a native app could be great. Starting on the web means you can try Threddo instantly—no installs, no friction—so you can see if it fits the way you work. Early adopters who join us now will be first in line for exclusive early access to the native version when it’s released.

How is this different from Raycast/Spotlight?

They search your whole machine. Threddo’s launcher is task-scoped—it only surfaces apps and links you attached to the current thread (and its parents), so you stay in context.

Do I have to use AI?

No. You can write reviews yourself and enable AI drafting whenever you want a head start.

Why is there no teams plan?

Threddo is built to empower you as an individual—on both personal and day-job projects. It optimizes for focus, privacy, and momentum, not oversight. We may explore lightweight sharing later (e.g., exporting or sharing a thread), but not status surveillance or PM control.

Request Invite Code

By submitting, you agree to our privacy policy.