Most productivity apps have the same problem.
They want your data. They send notifications.
They add features until you stop using them.
I wanted something different — an app that
records your day without asking too much.
So I built ZERO LOG.
What it does:
After launch:
No traffic. No feedback. No growth.
I'm trying to understand what's wrong:
Stack: TypeScript / React / Capacitor
Privacy: No ads. No tracking. No cloud sync.
Pricing: One-time purchase ($1.99)
I built this for people who want to keep
track of life without the friction of
writing everything down.
What would stop you from trying it?
The positioning issue is real here.
ZERO LOG has a clear privacy angle, but the product is trying to sit between task manager, notes, daily logging, recurring tasks, and low-friction life tracking. That is not necessarily bad, but the name makes it feel more like a logging utility than a calm personal workflow product.
The stronger promise is not “log more.” It is keeping track of your day without cloud dependency, ads, tracking, or productivity-app noise. That is a much better emotional angle.
I’d pressure-test the name before pushing more distribution. ZERO LOG sounds technical and narrow, while the product seems closer to an offline focus system for people who want structure without being pulled into another noisy app.
Xevoa .com would fit that broader direction better because it feels more like a serious personal workflow brand than a simple log tracker. If the product expands into routines, notes, task history, private planning, or offline-first productivity, the current name may start limiting how people understand it.