A coding journal that writes itself from your commits
Brag docs, TILs, and dev journals all die the same way. deariary builds a coding journal from your commits, PRs, and reviews instead.
deariary blog
Articles, essays, and writing from the deariary team.
Brag docs, TILs, and dev journals all die the same way. deariary builds a coding journal from your commits, PRs, and reviews instead.
Gratitude journal apps and deariary both build daily habits, but in opposite ways. One asks what you are thankful for. The other writes your day for you.
The answer to "what did I do today" is already in your apps. It just needs assembling.
Journal burnout is the exhaustion from trying to maintain a journaling habit. The cure is not more discipline. It is removing the writing altogether.
Journey gives you every tool to write a beautiful journal. deariary writes the journal for you. Here is how they compare.
Your calendar already tracks your days. Here's how to turn that schedule into a journal worth re-reading.
A love letter to Day One, the journal app that started it all, and why we needed something that could keep going when we couldn't.
Yesterday was a full day. You lived every hour of it. Try describing it now.
Most daily reflection apps ask you to remember your day. The best ones remember it for you. Here is what to look for.
Every evening you could summarize your day in two minutes. You never do. A daily recap app does it without asking.
AI journaling apps range from chat-based prompting to fully automatic diary generation. Here is how to find the right level of involvement for you.
Diarium shows your data as writing prompts. deariary turns it into a finished diary entry. Two apps, same integrations, completely different ideas.
The lifelogging movement had the right impulse. Log everything, lose nothing. The execution was wrong. Here is what works instead.
200 hours in one game is a chapter of your life. Steam + Discord + deariary turns your sessions into a diary you will actually want to re-read.
Building in public without the writing. Let GitHub, Todoist, and Bluesky assemble the devlog you would never maintain by hand.
Rosebud uses AI as your therapist. deariary uses AI to write your diary from your tools. Here is how these two AI journals compare.
An automatic diary needs your data to work. Here is how deariary handles that responsibility.
Reflectly and deariary both use AI for journaling, but in opposite ways. One prompts you to write. The other writes for you. Here is how they compare.
Your apps hold fragments of every day you have lived. Without a keeper, those fragments expire, scatter, and vanish.
Laziness is not the problem. It is the signal that the process is wrong.
Daylio and deariary both record your days without writing. But they capture completely different things. Here is how they compare.
Automatic journaling uses your existing app data to generate diary entries without writing. Here is how it works, who it is for, and what it cannot do.
You will become someone else. A diary is the only way that person can meet who you are right now.
Rosebud, Mindsera, Reflect, and deariary all use AI for journaling. But they use it in completely different ways. Here is how the landscape breaks down.
Reflection needs something concrete to reflect on. An AI diary gives you exactly that.
Every recording domain eventually automates. Personal diaries are simply the last to catch up.
deariary's built-in integrations cover the big apps. Webhooks let any script, device, or automation push data straight into your diary.
Fewer apps do mean thinner entries. But reading your diary has a way of changing what you reach for next.
Bluesky posts capture what you were thinking. deariary weaves them into your diary so those thoughts outlast the timeline.
Todoist checks off your tasks. deariary turns those completed items into a diary that shows what your day really looked like.
ChatGPT and Claude lock away your history. OpenClaw on Slack or Discord lets deariary capture those conversations as part of your diary.
Your calendar shows where you were. deariary turns it into a story of what your day actually felt like.
A diary is not for the day you write it. It is for the morning you open it again and feel the whole day return.
Most of your life will be forgotten. Not the big moments, the ordinary ones. Here is why, and what you can do about it.
Your Slack conversations vanish in days. deariary turns the ones that mattered into part of your diary.
Most people quit journaling because it demands effort on the worst days. What if it didn't?
GitHub's contribution graph shows that you worked. deariary shows what you actually did, organized by topic across repositories.
Your diary quality depends on the data it sees. Here are practical tips to make every entry richer and more personal.
We used them all. Day One, Notion, Obsidian, paper notebooks. Every time we thought 'this feature will make me keep writing.' Every time we stopped. Here is what we learned.
Why I built deariary, and what LLMs actually do for a diary.