The remote worker diary stack: Slack, Calendar, Toggl, Todoist
Four integrations cover the dimensions of a remote workday: schedule, conversation, tasks, time. Together they produce a remote work log that writes itself.
deariary blog
30 articles from June 2026.
← All monthsFour integrations cover the dimensions of a remote workday: schedule, conversation, tasks, time. Together they produce a remote work log that writes itself.
An iPad without a keyboard turns typing into a chore. Six journaling options that work with handwriting, voice, photos, or no input at all.
Use Twilio's WhatsApp Business API to forward messages you send yourself into a deariary webhook. The result is a chat diary you write by texting.
Steam, Discord, Last.fm: three integrations cover sessions, squad chat, and soundtrack. Together they produce a gaming journal that reads like the night.
People search for 'discord chat export' for a reason. Server deletes, account closures, and bans can cut off your access overnight. Here is what to do.
Pipe finished articles and book highlights into your diary with a webhook. A reading log that lives next to the rest of your day, not in another silo.
Three integrations capture solo building from the inside: the code that shipped, the public posts, and the running task list. Together they preserve what the build-in-public thread leaves out.
Daygram asks for one sentence a day on a paper-like screen. deariary asks for nothing and writes the day for you. Two answers to the same friction.
A Slack log of your in-the-moment thoughts, a calendar of what was scheduled, and a Todoist record of what you finished. Three feeds, one work diary.
What free journal apps actually cost over time. The sync, export, and history limits that decide whether free stays free in five years.
Four integrations cover the dimensions of a developer's day: code, conversation, intent, and time. Together they produce a developer journal that reads like the work.
A mood app journal usually starts with a button. Tap a face, pick a tag, done. There is another way: let the mood come from what you actually said and did.
The Hawthorne effect explains why being measured changes you. For self-tracking, that is a feature. For a diary trying to record your real days, a problem.
Diaro lets you tag, sort, and decorate every entry you write. deariary writes the entry. Two answers to the same question about what a diary app is for.
A comparison of work journal apps ranked by how much of your workday they capture without daily writing. From fully automatic to template-driven.
Three integrations cover most of how a media-heavy life is actually spent. Together they produce a media journal that reads like the evenings, not a stack of lists.
Discord servers hold the conversations you never want to lose: friend groups, communities, gaming sessions. deariary turns those messages into part of your diary.
A directory of Day One alternatives, sorted by the specific reason you are leaving. Each path points to the comparison that goes deep.
DARPA's LifeLog program tried to capture one person's entire experience. It was killed by privacy outrage in 2004. Twenty years later, we built it ourselves.
Tulving's 1972 distinction explains why you can list the facts of your past without being able to relive a single ordinary day of it.
Netflix knows every episode you finished, the exact minute it ended, and how many nights you chose it over going outside. You cannot get any of that out in any useful form. Here is what to do.
The hidden cost of journaling is not writing. It is reading. If a diary cannot be scanned in three minutes, it will not be read at all.
For twenty years, 'digital journal app' has meant a typing app with sync. Here is what the category looks like once the digital part does its job.
The second-brain promise is retrieval. What most people actually want is continuity. Those are different problems, and the fix is different too.
The most vivid memories feel like exact recordings. Decades of research show they rewrite themselves every retelling. Your diary does not.
The madeleine scene describes what psychology took 80 years to confirm: involuntary memory runs on specific external cues. The madeleine is not the point.
The five-minute pitch hides costs beyond time: decision load, curation bias, and the days the journal never captured.
Linear tracks the issues, comments, and project updates that shape your sprint. deariary turns them into a diary that remembers what you actually built.
Seven tenets for what an automatic journal is, what it must deliver, and what it must refuse. A declaration, not a definition.
Spotify Wrapped, Apple Memories, contribution graphs: these are all automatic memory. The category exists. It just has not been named.