DooHome & DooTalk — You Register Work, and It Becomes a Conversation

Calendar in one app, messenger in another, notes in a third. The time you spent stitching the split pieces back together disappears.

Work is scattered.

What's due today, what someone asked of you, what you put off, what you can't forget. So we add calendars, to-do lists, more and more tools — and the work is still scattered. myDoo starts simply: register it first, and make it visible.

Doo — the unit you register work as

In myDoo the unit you register work as is a Doo. An issue, an item, a thread — register anything as a Doo.

DooHome — your registered Doos gather, seen from several angles at once
DooHome — your registered Doos gather, seen from several angles at once

DooHome is where they gather, seen from four angles:

  • What do I do today, and tomorrow — the calendar's eye
  • Who did I hand this to — who's doing what
  • What comes first, what later — structure and priority
  • How far along is it — in progress, stalled, or done

The same work, through four eyes. Nothing scatters; it all shows in one place.

DooTalk — you jot, and it becomes a conversation

Work is rarely solo. And the basis of working together is conversation. The Doos with a story behind them need to be written down — and once you're writing, it's no different from a chat room.

DooTalk — the record attached to work becomes a conversation; invite people and it becomes a thread
DooTalk — the record attached to work becomes a conversation; invite people and it becomes a thread

So myDoo took one step further: invite people into a Doo, and it becomes a thread. Not a new messenger to fight KakaoTalk or Slack — just the conversation attached to the work, becoming a thread, reaching mobile too.

Nothing scatters

Calendar in one app, messenger in another, notes in a third — the time you spent stitching those split pieces back together disappears.

Some of this work you'll want to just ask about; some you'll set up a proper desk for. Next, those two seats — DooTable and DooDesk.


Next → DooTable — before you set up shop, ask three AIs