One account. One wallet, shared across every app. Each app runs on Oriora's servers — sign in once and start.
New here? See how it works in 30 secondsiPhone apps are rolling out gradually. In the EU, Oriora apps are available on web and macOSfor now — the iPhone (App Store) versions aren't available in the EU yet, but they're on the roadmap.
Describe an app. Oriora builds it — on your GitHub, with your AI key.
Tell Oriora Dev what you want in plain language and it builds a working app: it picks the right shape, generates the reliable ~80% foundation, then refines it round by round with you to 100%. The heavy build runs in YOUR own GitHub Actions and the code lands in YOUR repo — so a basic laptop, no expensive hardware, can ship real apps. The AI runs on your own key; you pay only the small Oriora fee per step.
Set up your service business once — then run it on your own accounts forever.
An AI co-founder that sets up your service-business stack in one session: a landing site on your Vercel, a Stripe payment link in your account, outreach emails you approve before they go. Everything lives on your accounts — GitHub, Vercel, Stripe, Resend. No lock-in. No one taking a cut. You bring your AI key; we charge only the small per-step Oriora fee.
Snap a receipt. AI files it. Stored locally on your Mac.
A privacy-first macOS app: photograph or paste a receipt and on-device OCR + AI extract the vendor, amount, date, and category. Search your spend in plain English, get a month-end summary, flag duplicates, and export to QuickBooks or Xero — all stored locally on your Mac, with AI billed to your Oriora wallet.
Your Mac remembers your workday. Ask it anything.
A privacy-first macOS app that quietly notes which files and apps you work in, then lets you ask plain-English questions about your day, week, or month and get a grounded answer that cites your real files - plus a weekly digest. We don't retain your data.
Time your deep work. Get a weekly read on it.
Set a focus session — 25, 50, or 90 minutes — start the timer, and when it ends add a short note on what you did. Focus keeps the full session history on your Mac. At the end of the week, the AI reads your session totals and notes and writes a plain-English summary of where your deep work actually went. Your sessions stay on your device; only your totals and notes are sent to write the summary, and Oriora keeps nothing.
Write freely. The AI reflects on your rhythm, not the words inside.
A quiet, distraction-free space for a daily writing habit. Your entries — and any photo you attach — stay on your Mac. Once a week the AI offers a gentle reflection on your journaling rhythm, built only from metadata: when you wrote, how often, and how long. The body of your entries is never sent anywhere; only that metadata slice reaches the AI, billed to your Oriora wallet.
Log how you feel. See the pattern, not a diagnosis.
Log your mood in seconds with a score, quick tags and an optional note. Mood keeps your history on your Mac and works out the patterns on-device — how this fortnight compares to the last, which tags line up with better or worse days, your steadiest and roughest weekdays. Ask for a reflection and the AI turns those numbers into a few calm, observational sentences. It describes what your data shows — never advice, never a diagnosis. Your entries stay on your device; only the computed pattern is sent to write the reflection.
Keep the streak. Get one honest insight.
Add the habits you want to build, set how often you want to do each one, and check them off day by day. Habits keeps your streaks and a 30-day view on your Mac. Tap Analyze and the AI reads your check-in history and gives you a per-habit adherence read plus one grounded insight — what's sticking, what's slipping — with no guilt-trip. Your habits and check-ins stay on your device; only your habit names, targets and check-in dates are sent to run the analysis.
Log your sets. See how your last two weeks are going.
Log your strength and cardio workouts on your iPhone — each exercise, its sets, reps and weight. Oriora Workout flags your personal records automatically and works out your 14-day training signals on your device: whether your volume is trending up, how often you train, and which lifts are moving. Ask for a trend summary and the AI reads those signals and writes a few plain sentences about your last two weeks — the patterns, not advice. Your log stays on your iPhone; only a small set of derived numbers is sent to write the summary, and Oriora keeps nothing.
Translate copy and see the localization choices a reviewer should check.
Paste a UI string, a transactional email, or marketing copy, choose a target language and tone, and optionally lock your brand and glossary terms. You get a native-sounding translation — not a word-for-word machine output — plus a short block of localization notes that flag the judgment calls: an idiom that was re-cast, a string that may now overflow a button, a formal or informal address decision, or a brand term kept verbatim. It runs in your Oriora account; the tool is free and each translation is billed to your wallet. Your text is sent for one translation and never stored.
Paste a raw transcript, get clean structured notes back.
Paste the messy transcript of any meeting — speaker labels, timestamps, and cross-talk are fine — and get clean structured notes back in one click: a tight TL;DR, the decisions that were made, action items with owners, and the questions left open. Copy it out as Markdown. It runs in your Oriora account, nothing you paste is stored, and the AI formatter is billed to your wallet.
Paste a customer message; get triage plus 2–3 reply drafts to review and send.
Paste an incoming customer support message and Oriora gives you the detected intent, a suggested triage tag, and 2–3 ready-to-edit reply drafts, each in a different tone. A human always reviews and sends — the tool drafts, it never messages your customers. It runs in your Oriora account, nothing is stored, and the AI drafting is billed to your wallet.
Your files, found in plain language — from the menu bar.
A Mac menu-bar app that indexes the files you save and lets you ask for them in plain English — "where is the contract Acme sent last Tuesday?" Shelf reads and indexes your files on your Mac; when you ask, only the handful of matching excerpts and your question go to the AI — never whole files, never the index. Summon it from anywhere with ⌘⇧Space. Billed to your Oriora wallet, a fraction of a cent per search.
Rate yourself on anything. See the trend, not a verdict.
A self-assessment tracker for iPhone: define a check-in — stress, sleep, energy, a skill, anything on a 1–N scale — and log a score whenever you like. Check-in charts the progression on your device. Ask the AI to read your history and it describes the trend in plain English: where it is heading, and since when — observational only, never advice. Your scores and notes stay on your device; only a small set of computed signals is sent to write the read.
Tell it what to post. It drafts in your voice, you approve, it posts.
Oriora Content is a chat: tell it what you want to post and where, and it drafts in your brand voice. You review, edit, and approve — then it posts to your connected accounts. Nothing goes out without your say-so. Connect each account once in your Oriora account, set your voice, and drafting runs on your own AI key.
Ask your spreadsheet a question.
Drop in a CSV and ask about it in plain English. Analyst parses the file and computes the figures and stats on your device — only the column names, the stats and a small sample go to the AI, never your full table. It answers with numbers and patterns from your own data. Uses your own AI key.
Your cellar, remembered.
Log the wines, whiskies and beers you taste, with your own scores, and the bottles in your cellar with the dates they're ready to drink. Cellar works out your palate on your device — where your high scores cluster by region and style, your top producers, what you've spent, and which bottles are inside their drink window. Ask for a palate portrait and the AI turns those numbers into a few plain sentences. Only the summary is sent, never your tasting notes.
Chores, points and a weekly recap.
Set up each child with their own chores and points, and tick off what gets done through the week. Chores keeps the running totals on your device. Once a week, ask for a recap and the AI writes a short, friendly note on who did what, points earned and streaks kept — from the numbers you logged.
Know what you actually wear.
Log the clothes you own and each time you wear them. Closet works out the numbers on your device — cost-per-wear for every item, what's gone unworn for months, how your wears split across categories and seasons. Ask for a Closet Recap and the AI turns those numbers into a few plain sentences about your own wardrobe. Your log stays on your device; only a small summary is sent to write the recap.
A home for any collection.
Catalogue whatever you collect — rocks, vinyl, coins, cards, scarves — with fields you define for that collection, and track sets as you complete them. Curio works out the shape of your collection on your device, then three AI actions narrate it back: a recap of the numbers, a reflection on how your taste has evolved, and ideas for where to take it next — all grounded only in what you own.
Your diff, written up.
Point it at a local git repo and, one tap before you push, it drafts a commit message or PR description in your repo's own style. Diff Brief reads your working-tree changes on your Mac and computes the per-file summary in Rust; only a condensed digest — never the full diff or whole files — is sent to write the draft. A tray icon and a ⌘⇧D hotkey bring it up instantly.
Your year in live music.
Log the shows you go to — artists, venues, who you went with, what you paid, how it was. Encore charts your gig history on your device: shows per year, most-seen artists, venues you keep returning to, where the money goes. Ask for a recap and the AI narrates your year in live music from those numbers.
Every dig, remembered.
Log your metal-detecting finds — item, material, era, site, depth, detector and settings, with a photo. Findlog groups them into hunts and works out your season on your device. Ask for a season recap and the AI narrates the patterns in what you've dug. Your finds, photos and any locations stay on your device.
A keepsake for a pet you loved.
A private memory book for a pet you loved. Save the moments — photos, dates, the little milestones and the ordinary days — and they stay on your device. When you're ready, ask for a remembrance and the AI weaves your own saved moments into a few warm sentences about their life. Your book stays on your device; only a short summary of what you saved is sent to write the remembrance.
Your car costs, made clear.
Log fuel and services for each vehicle you own. Garage works out the numbers on your device — fuel economy between full tanks, cost-per-mile over time, how long since each service, and where your spend goes. Ask for a read of your numbers, or ask your garage a question, and the AI turns the figures into plain words. Your log stays on your device; only a small summary is sent for the AI to read.
Never forget a good gift.
Log the gifts you give — who, the occasion, what it cost. Gifted works out the numbers on your device — how much you spend per person, what you tend to give, and which birthday or occasion is coming up next. Ask for a recap before the next occasion and the AI turns your own history into a few plain sentences. Your ledger stays on your device; only a small summary is sent to write the recap.
Learn from your own notes.
Point Hindsight at the notes, scripts and workflows you already keep, and it reads them on your device. Ask it to reflect and it surfaces the recurring themes and the lessons your own notes already hold; ask it to connect and it finds non-obvious links between specific notes; or just ask a question and get an answer cited to your notes. It reads only what you point it at — no cloud index, no embeddings to maintain. Your notes stay on your device; only a short summary and the excerpts it cites are sent for each action.
Every hive, season by season.
Keep an inspection journal for each colony — inspections, mite counts, treatments, feedings, splits and harvests. Hivewise works out each colony's structure on your device — queenright streaks, mite-count trends, feeding and treatment cadence, harvests by year. Ask for a Colony Story and the AI narrates those figures back for one hive, or ask a question about your own records. Your journal stays on your device; only a small summary is sent for the AI to read.
Your ink library, catalogued.
Catalogue your fountain-pen inks — brand, colour, properties, swatches — and log each fill-up. Inkwell works out the shape of your collection on your device — colour families, the inks you've never inked, which properties you reach for and when, your fill-up cadence. Ask for a Collection Recap and the AI turns those numbers into a few plain sentences, or ask your collection a question. Your catalogue stays on your device; only a small summary is sent, never your swatch photos.
Your keyboard builds, logged.
Track your mechanical-keyboard builds, switch inventory and group buys. Keycap works out your build history on your device — how many builds you've finished, your switch-type mix, what you've spent per build, and which group buys have been dragging on. Ask for a build recap and the AI turns those numbers into a few plain sentences. Your log stays on your device; only a small summary is sent, never your part names or photos.
Ask your codebase anything.
Point Know Your Code at a local git repo and it indexes it on your device — every file chunked and searchable, with a map of your functions and classes. Ask questions in plain English and get answers grounded in your actual code, each with file and line citations. It runs on your own AI key (BYOK): only the handful of code snippets that match your question ever leave your device — never the whole repo.
Your documents, answerable.
Keep your important documents — leases, policies, warranties, IDs — indexed on your device. Ask plain-English questions and get answers quoted straight from your own documents, cited to the page. Lockbox also reads the key dates out of them, so it can tell you what is expiring next and remind you the day before. Your documents stay on your device; only the passages that match a question are sent to write the answer.
Your journey to the next belt.
Keep a training journal for your martial art — classes, techniques drilled, belts, competitions and gear. Mat Time works out the numbers on your device: how many classes you've done, your attendance streaks, what you drill most, how long you've held each belt. Ask it to narrate your year on the mats and the AI turns those numbers into a few plain sentences. Your journal stays on your device; only a small summary is sent to write the recap.
Armies, paint and the pile of shame.
Track your wargaming hobby — your armies and factions, the paint recipes you use, and the unbuilt backlog (the pile of shame). Muster works out the numbers on your device: points painted versus unpainted, how many models sit at each stage, which recipes you lean on, how long things have been work-in-progress. Ask for a recap and the AI turns those numbers into a few plain sentences. Your data stays on your device; only a small summary is sent to write the recap.
Your practice, reflected back.
A private log for a tarot or mindfulness practice — your pulls, intentions and reflections. Oracle works out your own patterns on your device: which cards recur, how they line up with your moods and tags, how often the intentions you set actually land. Ask for a reading recap and the AI mirrors those patterns back in a few plain sentences. It is for reflection and entertainment — not prediction or advice. Your log stays on your device; only a small summary is sent to write the recap.
Stay ahead of the next size.
Track each child's clothing sizes and see who is about to grow out of what before the season turns. Outgrown works out the numbers on your device — current size per category, how fast it is changing, how brands differ, and how the sizes you have bought ahead line up with where your child is now. Ask for a sizing recap, or ask your own questions about the sizes. Your data stays on your device; only a small summary is sent to write the answer.
Your pet's life, in one timeline.
Keep everything for each pet in one timeline — weight, meals, meds, vaccines, vet visits and milestones. Pawline works out the numbers on your device: how your pet's weight has trended over months, how regularly you have logged meals and meds, when the last vaccine and vet note were. Ask for a recap and the AI narrates those figures in a few plain sentences. Your data stays on your device; only a small summary is sent to write the recap.
Every plant's care story.
Keep a care log for each plant — when you water, feed and repot. Plant Diary works out each plant's own rhythm on your device: how long since its last watering versus its usual gap, what's overdue, and whether this is its longest gap of the year. Ask for a recap and the AI turns those numbers into a few plain sentences about your plants. It describes your care log — it won't diagnose problems or give gardening advice. Your log stays on your device; only a small summary is sent to write the recap.
Your year in books.
Log the books you read — rating, page count, status and dates — in one tidy shelf. At year's end, ask for a Year in Reading recap and the AI turns your log into a few plain sentences: how many books and pages, the genres you leaned into, and how your reading pace moved through the year. It describes your reading — it won't recommend books or judge your taste. Your log stays on your device; only a small summary is sent to write the recap.
"What can I make tonight?"
Keep all your saved and cooked recipes in one place. Tell Recipe Box what you have on hand and the AI looks across your own collection to find what you can make tonight — what's ready to cook, what's one ingredient short, and what you've saved but never tried. It works only from recipes you've saved; it never invents one, and it won't give nutrition or diet advice. Your collection stays on your device; only a small summary is sent to answer the question.
Your reef tank, trending.
Log your reef tank — water parameters, dosing, livestock and water changes. Reefline works out the trends on your device: how each parameter has drifted, planned dosing versus what you actually dosed, how long since your last water change, and what you've added or lost. Ask for a Tank Recap and the AI turns those numbers into a short, plain-language summary of your log. It describes what you've recorded — it won't give husbandry advice, diagnose livestock, or name a target value. Your log stays on your device; only a small summary is sent to write the recap.
See what you really pay.
Keep a registry of your subscriptions and their prices. Renewals works out the numbers on your device: your true monthly and yearly load across every billing cadence, what renews soon, and where a price has crept up since you last logged it. Ask for a Subscription Recap and the AI states those figures back in a few plain sentences. It describes your own log — it won't tell you what to cancel or judge whether a price is worth it. Your log stays on your device; only a small summary is sent to write the recap.
Worth buying again?
Keep a ledger of the beauty and care products you use up — how long each one lasted, your rating, and whether you'd buy it again. When you mark a product empty, Repurchase works out how it did against your history on your device, and the AI narrates it back: how long it lasted versus your others, how it ranks, and how many times you've rebought it. It describes your own log — it won't tell you what to buy or give any skin or ingredient advice. Your ledger stays on your device; only a small summary of the one product is sent to write the recap.
Your golf game, tracked.
Log your rounds — scores, stats and the clubs in your bag. Round Card works out the trends on your device: how your scoring is moving, your fairways hit and greens in regulation, your putting, the courses you play most, and how your bag has changed over the season. Ask for a Season Recap and the AI turns those numbers into a few plain sentences about your game. It describes your own rounds — it won't coach you or compute an official handicap. Your log stays on your device; only a small summary is sent to write the recap.
Ask a question. Get a researched answer.
Ask a research question and Scout works through it in steps — searching the web, reading the sources it finds, and writing a short brief with citations you can open and check. It runs on your own AI key (BYOK); Oriora provides the web search. Your research history stays on your device.
Your season of sends.
Log every climb and boulder — grade, venue, attempts, ascent style, indoor or outdoor. Send Log works out the numbers on your device: your hardest send this season, how many attempts a project took, how your grades have drifted over the year. The Insights screen shows all of this with no AI. Ask for a season recap and the AI turns those numbers into a few plain sentences. Your log stays on your device; only a small summary is sent to write the recap.
“What was that command?”
Indexes your shell history on your Mac so you can find a command you ran without scrolling through history. Ask in plain English — "the rsync one I used for the backup" — and Shell Recall pulls the matching commands from your own history and shows where and when you ran them. The index stays on your Mac; only the top candidate commands for your question are sent to answer it, and obvious secrets like keys and passwords are masked before anything is indexed.
Your yarn, your queue.
Keep your yarn stash and your project queue in one place. Log the yarn you own and the patterns you want to make, and Skein narrates how your stash lines up with what your queued patterns need. Your data stays on your device.
Know what you own, and where.
Catalogue the things you pack away between seasons — decorations, gear, off-season clothes — and where each one is stored. Stash works out the picture on your device: what you have for each season, what's still boxed and never used, where things live. Ask what you have for a season, or where something is, and the AI answers from your own catalogue. Your data stays on your device.
Your spending, in plain English.
Import your bank statements and Statements totals everything on your device — by category, by merchant, by month, with month-over-month changes and the recurring charges it spots. Ask a plain-English question like "how much did I spend on groceries last month?" and the AI answers from those numbers, and shows the figures behind it. Your raw transactions never leave your device.
Your AI morning briefing — personalised to what you actually care about.
Oriora News runs a small pipeline overnight: it collects stories from RSS, Hacker News and any feeds you add, scores them against your interests, and writes a briefing — Key Developments, Industry Signals, Action Items and a TL;DR. You wake up to it, thumb stories up or down to sharpen the next one, and steer the whole thing by chat. Runs on your own AI key.
Track how you feel over time.
Log how you feel each day — pain and energy, sleep, triggers, medications — and Symptom Log works out the trends on your device: rolling averages and how they've changed, bad-day streaks, day-of-week patterns, and which logged triggers line up with worse days. Ask for a trend summary and the AI describes those numbers in plain sentences. It is not a medical device and gives no medical advice — it only describes your own logged data. Your log stays on your device.
More apps in the pipeline.
Each one server-side. Each one quality-gated.