An ebike for your brain.
Wear your Plaud.ai recorder. micoco.ai builds two kinds of memory in your private open-brain β a timeline of every conversation and a wiki of every person, project, and idea you bump into β and lets you ask either one anything in plain English. What did Sarah promise about Q3? What do we know about RAG? Why did I walk into the kitchen? Commitments land on your calendar. The morning brief tells you what's coming. Forgetting becomes optional.
Today, Friday May 9
Eng standup β 4 commitments captured
Coffee with Sarah re: Q3 plan
"Wait β why did I walk into the kitchen?"
Strategy review β outcomes to calendar
Daily brief β tomorrow's prep
For people who'd rather remember everything, and know they don't β founders, doctors, consultants, parents juggling two careers and three kids' schedules, anyone whose memory could use a tailwind. (Yes, micoco β pronounced mee-KOH-koh β is Spanish slang for "my brain." Use of cocos may vary.)
Your brain has two memory systems. Yours should too.
Episodic memory tracks what happened and when. Semantic memory tracks what you know β about people, projects, ideas. Both fail differently with age and overload. Both are needed for fluent recall. micoco.ai builds both, automatically, from the same Plaud captures.
Episodic memory
Every conversation captured in order, searchable in plain English. What did Sarah promise on Tuesday? When did the contractor say he'd be back? Replay the moment, with the verbatim quote.
Semantic memory
Every person, organization, concept, and project you encounter β distilled into a personal wiki. What do we know about RAG? Who is Sarah Chen? Each entry has provenance back to the moment you heard it.
The daybook you never kept.
Every evening, micoco.ai weaves the day together β your conversations, your commitments, the quotes that landed, the moments you'd otherwise lose, even why you walked into the kitchen β into a living Google Doc you own. Read it tomorrow over coffee. Re-read it in five years. (Photos from your day are coming next.)
What it writes
"Started the morning deep in a media consumption spiral β the kind of Wednesday where the coffee is still brewing and you're already three podcasts in. Chamath was up first, talking about this framing of finite versus infinite games that I keep turning overβ¦"
β actual entry, abbreviated. About 400 words a day, neutral first person. Ends on what you were turning over by day's end, not on a moral.
Where it lives
Your Google Doc, in your Drive. Never on our servers. Each entry is hyperlinked back to the source moment in your open brain. When you cancel, your daybook stays where it always was β with you.
Currently in private beta with a handful of test users. Open to subscribers later this quarter.
From a hallway chat to a calendar invite β automatically.
Six steps. You only ever touch the first.
Plaud records
Wear it on your shirt or lanyard. It captures every conversation.
Plaud template parses
Our custom template segments the day into discrete events.
Zapier β Gmail
The parsed transcript lands in your own Gmail inbox.
Open-brain ingests
Stored in Contemporary Memory on your private Supabase instance.
Calendar fills itself
Future commitments are extracted and added to Google Calendar.
Brief lands in your inbox
What was promised, what's coming, what to follow up on β every evening.
Six jobs, one quiet system.
Open-brain memory
Every conversation captured and organized into your private Contemporary Memory β searchable in plain English.
Ask-anything recall
"What did the supplier quote on Tuesday?" Type the question, get the answer β with the moment it was said.
Calendar that fills itself
Meetings, dinners, deadlines, recitals β anything committed to out loud lands on your Google Calendar.
Daily morning brief
One screen each morning: what's coming, what was promised, what to follow up on.
Memory explorer
Browse the timeline by date, person, or topic. Replay the moment a quote was said β verbatim, with context.
iPhone companion
Capture, search, and the morning brief on the go. SwiftUI app on TestFlight Q3 2026.
Three ways people use micoco.ai.
Knowledge work
Founders, doctors, lawyers, consultants. Standups, sales calls, hallway chats β every commitment captured, every quote recallable, nothing lost between meetings.
See the use case βThe mental load at home
Two careers, three kids, a contractor who said "I'll be back Tuesday." micoco.ai carries the schedule, the pediatrician notes, and the small promises you'd otherwise drop.
See the use case βCaring for an aging parent
That's a different job β medication compliance, vital signs, and a daily report to a family member or home health agency. We built a sister product for it.
Visit careib.io βYour brain. Your Supabase. Your Gmail.
micoco.ai runs your open-brain in a bespoke Supabase instance β not a shared multi-tenant database. Audio comes from your Plaud device, transcripts route through your own Gmail account, and vital signs sync from devices you own. We supply the belt and suspenders. You own the rest.
Read the privacy model βWhat you supply
- Your Plaud.ai recorder + subscription
- Your personal Gmail account
- Your Google Calendar
- Bluetooth medical devices (optional)
What we supply
- Bespoke Supabase per user
- Open-brain ingestion + memory schema
- Custom Plaud template + Zapier flow
- Daily brief, prompts, report engine
- iPhone companion (coming soon)
Fourteen days free, then a small monthly fee.
No credit card to start. Cancel anytime during the trial. Bring your own Plaud and Gmail.