The family brain, in practice
Ourday lives in the channels your family already uses. Text, email, and if you're the kind of family that uses an AI assistant, right through that too. There's nothing new to open and nothing to keep up with.
Here's what that looks like day to day.
The moment something crosses your mind
Text Ourday like you'd text a very organized relative. "Sawyer has a makeup game Saturday at 9." "Remind me to send the field trip money." A photo of the tournament bracket taped to the gym door.
Forward emails too. The school newsletter, the practice schedule, the camp confirmation. Your family gets its own address, and anything sent there gets read, understood, and remembered. You can even give that address directly to the school so the newsletter skips your inbox entirely.
Ourday pulls out the events, the deadlines, and the to-dos, and quietly ignores the rest. If something's ambiguous, it asks instead of guessing.
"Today," every morning. "This Week," every Sunday.
Each weekday morning, everyone in the family gets "Today": a short, personal rundown. What's on for the day, what needs to leave the house, what's coming due. Kids get their version, adults get theirs.
Sunday mornings bring "This Week," a look at the week ahead so the family can see the shape of things before Monday hits.
That's the rhythm. No feeds to scroll, no notifications competing for attention. Two well-timed messages that respect your morning.
Can't remember? Ask.
"What time is the recital?" "What was the wifi password at the lake house?" "When's Sawyer's next dentist appointment?" Text the question, get the answer. The whole point of a shared brain is that any family member can pull from it, any time.
Shared brain, personal spaces
Family logistics are shared by default; that's the point. But not everything is for everyone. A note about a kid's doctor visit stays with the parents. A private reminder stays private. Kids' information starts with sensible boundaries for their age, and parents decide when those widen.
You never fill out a permissions screen. You just say things like "keep that between us" and Ourday handles it.
Ourday speaks MCP
If someone in your family uses Claude or another AI assistant, Ourday connects to it directly through MCP. Ask your assistant what's on the family calendar, add a reminder from a chat you're already in, and it flows through the same family brain with the same boundaries. Each family member gets their own key, so a kid's assistant sees only what that kid would see.
Built in, not bolted on.
What we deliberately left out
There's no app to download and no dashboard to check. No ads, and no affiliate links dressed up as suggestions. No read receipts, no open tracking, no engagement scores. No streaks, points, or badges. Family logistics is not a game and you don't need another thing watching you.
14 days free.