Product walkthrough

Every screen,
explained.

A guided tour of how SuperLazy actually works — what each screen does, how to use it, the real problems it solves, and the thinking behind every feature.

01 The Dump tab

One box for
everything.

The home screen is a single, friendly inbox. Paste a link, type a thought, snap a photo, drop a PDF, or hit the mic. No "choose a folder" step, no forms — just throw it in.

How to use it
  • Tap the paste box to drop a link or type a quick note, then hit send.
  • Use the Photo, PDF, Scan or Voice shortcuts for richer captures.
  • The floating mic lets you talk: "add buy milk to my to-do list".
Use cases
  • Saw a great thread? Share it into SuperLazy and keep scrolling.
  • Bill due Friday — snap it; it lands in Time-sensitive automatically.
  • Shower idea — say it out loud before it's gone.
The thinking
  • Capture has to be friction-zero, or you won't do it. One box, one tap.
  • Time-sensitive items and to-dos surface on top so nothing important hides.
The problem it solves

Every other app makes you decide where something goes the moment you save it. That tiny tax is why your notes are scattered across six apps. SuperLazy removes the decision entirely.

9:41
Brain Dump
GS
Drop anything here
auto-sorted by AI
Paste a link, type a thought…
Photo
PDF
Scan
Voice
Time-sensitive2
Call Sam at 3pm
Overdue · Today
To-do list3
DUMP
BRAIN
ASK
ME
02 The AI pipeline

It reads,
so you don't.

The moment you dump something, SuperLazy goes to work: it fetches the link, captions the image, transcribes the voice note or reads the PDF, writes a summary, pulls key points, picks a folder, and embeds it for search — live, in front of you.

How to use it
  • Nothing to do — it runs automatically after every dump.
  • Optionally type a folder hint, or add a voice note for context.
  • Watch the steps tick off, then it files itself away.
Use cases
  • A 40-page PDF becomes a 3-line TL;DR you can actually skim.
  • An Instagram reel gets watched and summarized into text.
  • A rambly voice memo turns into clean, searchable notes.
The thinking
  • The expensive AI work happens once, at capture — recall stays instant.
  • Showing the steps builds trust: you see exactly what it understood.
The problem it solves

Saved content is dead weight if you never re-read it. By understanding everything up front, SuperLazy turns a pile of links into knowledge you can search and ask about.

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Analyzing…
AI
Fetched the link
Read & summarized
Pulled key points
Filing into a folder…
TL;DR
A practical guide to building agents with DSPy — start simple, evaluate, then optimize prompts.
IdeasAIread-later
DUMP
BRAIN
ASK
ME
03 The Brain Map

A map that
builds itself.

Everything you dump is sorted into colour-coded folders that appear on their own. No drag-and-drop, no nesting menus — your knowledge organizes itself as it grows.

How to use it
  • Tap any folder to see everything filed inside it.
  • Use the search bar or mic to jump straight to anything.
  • Glance at the stats: how much you've dumped and saved this week.
Use cases
  • Browse "Travel" before a trip to see every place you bookmarked.
  • Open "Recipes" on a Sunday to plan the week's cooking.
  • Check "Bills" so nothing financial slips through.
The thinking
  • Folders are an outcome, not a chore — the AI assigns them for you.
  • Seeing your brain "fill up" is motivating and makes it feel alive.
The problem it solves

Manual folders rot. You make them once, then never maintain them. Auto-organization means structure that stays accurate without any upkeep.

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Your
Brain Map
Search categories, tags, or content
86
dumped
9
folders
12
this week
Auto-organized by AI
Travel
12 things
Ideas
28 things
Reads
41 things
Recipes
15 things
DUMP
BRAIN
ASK
ME
04 Ask your Brain

Answers,
with receipts.

Ask a question in plain words and get a real answer drawn only from what you saved — every claim backed by the exact source items, so you can tap through and verify.

How to use it
  • Type or speak a question like "what do I need to do this week?".
  • Tap a suggested prompt to get started instantly.
  • Open any cited source to jump to the original dump.
Use cases
  • "Summarize what I saved about marketing this month."
  • "Which links did I save about AI agents?"
  • "What were the key points from that PDF on taxes?"
The thinking
  • Answers grounded in your own sources mean no made-up facts.
  • Citations turn "trust me" into "see for yourself".
The problem it solves

Search gives you a list of links to dig through. You don't want links — you want the answer. Ask gives you the answer and the links.

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Ask your Brain
What do I need to do this week?
You have 3 things due: call Sam (today), renew passport (Fri), and pay the electricity bill.
Call Sam Passport Bill
Summarize what I saved about AI
Ask anything about your stuff…
DUMP
BRAIN
ASK
ME
05 Voice & commands

Just say it.

Tap the mic and talk. Say "add …" and it saves; say "find …" and it digs it back up. The button turns red and pulses while it listens, and stops on its own when you go quiet.

How to use it
  • Tap the floating mic on Dump, or the mic on Brain/Find.
  • Speak naturally — it transcribes, understands intent, and acts.
  • Switch the language hint (AUTO / EN / HI / ZH) if needed.
Use cases
  • Driving or walking and an idea hits — capture it hands-free.
  • "Remind me to call mom at 6pm" sets a real reminder.
  • "Find that recipe with paneer" surfaces it instantly.
The thinking
  • The fastest input is your voice — no typing, no tapping around.
  • One mic does both saving and searching, so there's nothing to learn.
The problem it solves

Great ideas vanish in the seconds it takes to unlock, find an app, and type. Speaking captures them before they're gone.

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RECORDING
Press and speak to have a conversation
06 Item detail

Everything,
at a glance.

Open any saved item to get the TL;DR, the key points, its tags, and — for voice notes — a playable recording. Add it to your calendar or share it in a tap.

How to use it
  • Tap any item from a folder, search, or the home lists.
  • Skim the summary and key points instead of the whole thing.
  • Add to calendar, play the voice note, share, or delete.
Use cases
  • Re-read the gist of a long article in 10 seconds.
  • Turn "dentist next Tuesday" into a calendar event.
  • Share a saved recipe straight to a friend.
The thinking
  • The summary is the product — the original is one tap away if you want it.
  • Actions live where the content is, so follow-through is effortless.
The problem it solves

Reopening a 20-minute video or 40-page PDF to remember one point is painful. The detail view gives you the essence immediately.

9:41
IdeasAI
Building agents with DSPy
TL;DR
Program, evaluate, then optimize. Start with one module; add complexity only when the metric says so.
Key points
Define the task & signature first
Build a dev set + a metric
Optimize prompts last
DUMP
BRAIN
ASK
ME
07 Find & search

Search by
meaning.

Find understands what you mean, not just the words you typed. It reads your intent, ranks results semantically, and can route you straight to the right item or folder.

How to use it
  • Type a phrase, or tap the mic and say what you're after.
  • Use natural language — "that article about sleep" works.
  • Open a result, or refine with the intent chips.
Use cases
  • Forgot the title? Describe it and it still finds it.
  • "Reels about cooking" pulls saved videos by topic.
  • Hunt down a fact buried in a PDF you saved months ago.
The thinking
  • You rarely remember exact words — you remember the idea.
  • Semantic embeddings match meaning, so fuzzy memory still works.
The problem it solves

Keyword search fails when you forget the exact phrase. Meaning-based search finds what you're thinking of, not just what you typed.

9:41
Find
sleep tips I saved
search · Reads · last 30d
Why we sleep — key takeaways
PDF · Reads
10 tips for deep sleep
Reel · Reads
DUMP
BRAIN
ASK
ME
08 The Me tab

You're in
control.

Your profile, your streak, and the switches that matter: sound effects, a replayable tour, sign out, and a one-tap "Reset brain" that wipes everything on-device.

How to use it
  • Track your daily streak to keep the habit going.
  • Toggle sound effects, or replay the guided tour anytime.
  • Use "Reset brain" to wipe all local data instantly.
Use cases
  • Handing your phone to someone? Reset clears everything.
  • Forgot how a feature works? Replay the tour.
  • Keep your streak alive with one quick dump a day.
The thinking
  • Privacy controls should be obvious and one tap away.
  • A gentle streak nudges the daily-capture habit without nagging.
The problem it solves

Most apps bury data deletion and treat your content as theirs. SuperLazy keeps control front-and-center — your brain, your rules.

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Me
7-day streak
Gaurav Sarkar
Sound effects
Show me around
Reset brain
DUMP
BRAIN
ASK
ME
Keep exploring

Why it exists.

That's the whole tour

Ready to be SuperLazy?

Dump anything. Find it later. Let the AI do the filing.