Weekend diary recipe: Trakt, Swarm, and Bluesky
Three integrations capture a weekend from three angles: where you went, what you watched, and what you said about it. The result is a weekend diary that writes itself.
deariary blog
13 articles tagged "usecase".
← All tagsThree integrations capture a weekend from three angles: where you went, what you watched, and what you said about it. The result is a weekend diary that writes itself.
Four integrations cover the dimensions of a remote workday: schedule, conversation, tasks, time. Together they produce a remote work log that writes itself.
Steam, Discord, Last.fm: three integrations cover sessions, squad chat, and soundtrack. Together they produce a gaming journal that reads like the night.
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.
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.
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.
A weekly reflection should start with a clear record of the week, not a blank page. Your tools already have the material.
The hardest part of a Todoist weekly review is remembering the week. deariary gives you a daily record so your review starts with answers, not blank stares.
A daily log app should produce a record, not demand a ritual. Here is why the best one runs in the background.
Your tools already know what you did. deariary assembles commits, meetings, tasks, and conversations into one diary entry, no writing required.
The answer to "what did I do today" is already in your apps. It just needs assembling.
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.