Guardian

The assistant that understands you.

Guardian memorizes your screen, your conversations, and the world around you, then acts on it before you have to ask.

guardian 19,300 memories · 17 days
4 sources · screen 44% · voice 35% · video 19% · metadata 2%

A sample day

Sunday. A late night rolls into a slow morning, an airport pickup, a long drive with good conversation, and an honest evening with a friend. No agenda. Guardian captured all of it.

00:30

Still at a 24-hour cafe from the night before. A conversation about Proust turns into a debate about whether recording your life changes how you live it. Someone asks about the app. Jackie says the data is thin but imagine a super intelligent AI analyzing every interaction you have.

Corgi Cafe, San Francisco

09:00

Morning at home. Beatles White Album playing. Casual exchanges about the neighbor, an ice machine, and whether anyone wants to drive to San Jose. Guardian identifies the music as media, not conversation.

347 Dolores St, San Francisco

13:00

Airport pickup at SFO Terminal 3. Kendrick Lamar playing on the drive over. Jackie calls from the ground floor: “Hi, I’m at terminal three, door one.” The drive back becomes two hours of conversation about movies, memory, and what Proust actually meant.

SFO → San Francisco

16:30

An honest conversation with Paul. Velvet Underground playing. Jackie says “I can’t do the cheering. I’m just not a cheering person. This is not who I am.” Paul pushes back. Neither of them drops it.

San Francisco

18:30

Taco Bell run in Hayes Valley. The conversation is lighter now. They talk about people they know, who’s cute, who’s serious, what to do this week.

Hayes Valley, SF

Guardian

At 1 AM you told someone that recording your life might change how you live it. At 4:30 PM you told Paul you can’t be someone you’re not. You said both things like they were separate thoughts. They aren’t.

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