Stop organizing your life. Stop asking "what should I do next?" Krytz captures everything, computes priority under constraints, and tells you exactly what to do right now — with full reasoning attached.
Every task you capture becomes a node. Every blocker, deadline, and dependency becomes an edge. The network fires under load — weighing 7 signals per task in real time — and surfaces the one PRIMARY you should be doing right now. With full reasoning attached.
A voice memo. A pasted email. A line in your morning dump. The parser shreds it into items — tasks, blockers, commitments, deadlines — and stamps each as a node in your graph.
"Ship onboarding" can't fire until "Fix payment sync update" resolves. The priority layer reads these edges as activation gates — weight flows through the graph the way a real network thinks.
Krytz groups the work, explains why an item matters, and keeps one primary action visible while the rest waits its turn.
A todo list is flat. A board is flat. A doc is flat. Your real work has structure — thousands of nodes, all connected, weighted, firing in parallel. Krytz reads it that way. So you can stop reading it at all.
Krytz is built to live where the thinking happens — pocket, browser, laptop. The same system. The same one Primary. Glance at it and know what's next without opening anything.
The average knowledge worker uses 9.4 apps to manage work. They spend 58% of their time on "work about work" — organizing, checking status, context-switching. 67% of tasks created in productivity tools are never completed.
Lists tell you what exists.
Krytz tells you what's actually happening.
You don't need another place to write things down. You need a system that reads the noise back as state — and tells you what to do next, on the record.
No forms. No tags. No structure. Just type or speak — the AI finds tasks, deadlines, blockers, and commitments automatically.
Text, voice, images, PDFs. No folders. No categories. No priority field. Drop it in — the system structures it.
Intelligent extraction turns fragments into a live graph of items, blockers, commitments, deadlines, and downstream effects. Updated in real-time.
A 7-signal priority layer — urgency, importance, dependency, recency, mentions, energy fit, effort — surfaces one Primary, three Next, the rest quiet.
A voice memo at 14:22 becomes structured items and a suggested queue in the public demo. The page shows the user experience without exposing private mechanics.
The public flow shows capture, understanding, organization, and guidance in one loop. Voice, text, and files become suggested next actions without exposing implementation details.
Most todo apps open to a blank input. Krytz opens to your state: overload detection, capacity model, pressure gauge. React first, capture second.
Krytz adapts to your work patterns over time. Repeated corrections, snoozes, and completions help the product present calmer suggestions.
Every suggestion includes a plain-language explanation. Correct it once, and Krytz remembers that preference.
Pressure aggregates overdue + load + deadlines + blocked. It rises before you crash and tells you which lever drops it the most.
Resolve the Asha proposal to drop pressure ~22 points.
Intent-aware retrieval over your captures — semantic, temporal, causal. Sources cited on every answer. If the data isn't there, the system says so.
Krytz works on its own. Connect calendar, mail, docs, and the same system reads them as signal. You decide what flows in.
No "join the waitlist" psy-ops. If there's a seat for you within a week, a human writes back.
By submitting, you agree to receive one email when we have a seat. Nothing else.