Use case · People

Be the person who remembers.

Being remembered feels like being valued — and being the one who remembers is a quiet superpower. Resyl gives it to you. Tell it about anyone you meet — 'met Daniel at the gym, two kids, just started a coffee brand, loves cycling' — and it becomes a memory tied to that person. Next time you see them, or before you do, ask 'what do I know about Daniel?' and it's all there: name, context, the thread of every past conversation. No more 'sorry, remind me your name'. No more meeting someone for the third time like it's the first. Just relationships that feel personal because you actually remember.

Sound familiar?

  • You're great with faces, hopeless with names — and it's awkward.
  • You meet someone twice and don't remember the first time.
  • The little personal details that build warmth slip away.
  • You know you know this person — but the context is gone.

How Resyl helps

Everything, tied to the person

Name, where you met, their kids, their work, that thing they love — all attached to one person and recalled together.

Ask before you see them

Before a coffee or a call, ask 'what do I know about Daniel?' and walk in remembering the whole thread.

Capture in a breath

A 10-second voice note right after meeting someone is all it takes — Resyl structures and files it under them.

Your network, visualized

The Brain graph shows everyone you know and how they connect — your whole social world, explorable.

Just say or type

Met Daniel at the gym — has two young kids, just launched a coffee brand, big into cycling. Lives nearby.

Resyl turns that into a structured memory, tied to the right person — in under 10 seconds.

In real life

The neighbor

You bump into a neighbor whose name you forgot. Earlier you'd noted it — a quick glance and you greet them by name. Small thing, big warmth.

The reconnection

Someone you met once last year reaches out. You ask Resyl, recall exactly where you met and what you discussed, and reply like no time passed.

The detail that lands

Before dinner you check what you know — their daughter just started college. You ask about her. They light up.

People feel valued when they feel remembered.

Everything Resyl does

One app for capturing, recalling, and sharing the memory of your life — by voice, photo, or text.

Speak it or type it

Talk like you're telling a friend, or type a line. Even a long voice note or a whole meeting gets transcribed automatically and turned into a clean, structured memory.

Snap a photo, keep the text

Photograph a whiteboard, business card, document, or screenshot — Resyl reads the text and entities out of the image and files it as a memory you can search later.

Ask, don't browse

"What happened with Priya?" returns a synthesized answer with the people, dates, and details intact — not a list of links you have to dig through.

Your Brain, mapped

Every person, topic, and memory is linked in a living relationship graph — your whole network, visualized and explorable.

Share to friends & Communities

Send a single memory to a friend, or create a private Community where members share only what's relevant. Nothing is public by default.

Works in your language

Capture and recall in English, Hindi, or Hinglish — speak or type the way you actually talk, and the AI understands it.

Private by design

Sensitive data is encrypted with AES-256-GCM at rest, personal details are masked before any AI processing, and when you delete something it's permanently gone.

Free, mobile-first, offline-ready

Live free on Android, captures in under 10 seconds, works offline, and syncs the moment you're back online.

Remember everyone — FAQ

Can it help me with names specifically?

Yes. Note someone's name with where you met and a detail or two, and pair it with a photo if you like. When you search them, name, face, and context come back together — so the next greeting is easy.

How is this different from my phone's contacts?

Contacts store a number. Resyl stores the relationship — every conversation, detail, and follow-up tied to the person, recalled by asking a question. It's memory, not a directory.

Is it weird to 'log' people?

It's the opposite — it lets you treat people as people instead of forgettable transactions. You're not building a database; you're making sure the humans who matter don't slip through the cracks.

Start remembering — free on Android

No setup, no subscription. Speak or type a thought, and ask anything later.

Get Resyl on Android →