Comparisons
wamid vs the alternatives.
Six honest comparisons. We don't pretend wamid wins on everything — we pretend on the parts where it does (and don't on the parts where it doesn't).
vs Apple Notes
wamid vs Apple Notes
You love Apple Notes for the speed of capture and the way it just works. You came here because the moment your notes have to come back, they don't — and you end up scrolling for the one you wrote last Tuesday.
vs Notion
wamid vs Notion
Notion is a workspace you build. wamid is a memory you drop things into. If you've already spent hours setting up databases, templates, and properties — and the captures still don't come back when you need them — that's the difference.
vs Mem.ai
wamid vs Mem.ai
Mem promised AI-organized notes. Then it pivoted to chat. If you signed up for the original promise and feel orphaned, wamid is built on the same instinct — but as a focused mobile-first memory, not a chat product.
vs Rewind
wamid vs Rewind
Rewind captures everything — screen, audio, browsing — passively. wamid is the explicit opposite: invited memory, not captured memory. Nothing happens until you choose to drop a thought in.
vs Google Keep
wamid vs Google Keep
Google Keep is free and fast. It also stops at storage — once you've written a note, it's just sitting there until you remember to search. wamid picks up where Keep ends: the part where memory actually comes back to help you.
vs Todoist
wamid vs Todoist
Todoist is a task manager — you tell it what to do, when. wamid is a memory — you drop thoughts, voice memos, photos, and it brings the right one back when the moment matters. The two coexist; they don't compete.