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Ask HN: Why do task apps fail at task initiation?
1 points by gbessoni 110 days ago
I’ve noticed many task apps are good at planning, but still weak at helping people actually start.

I dug through Reddit threads on ADHD/executive dysfunction and kept seeing the same pattern: people don’t need more organization features — they need lower friction to begin the first step.

So I built a voice-first task app around that idea: - quick voice capture instead of typing - one-task-at-a-time flow - built-in timer to force a start

I’m curious from the HN crowd: 1. Why do you think most task apps fail at initiation? 2. What interaction patterns actually help you start? 3. What would you test first in a product like this?

If you want, I can share what patterns I extracted from Reddit and what I’m measuring now.

2 comments

When I am finding tasks hard to complete I fall back to paper lists. These are privileged relative to all the things that live on a screen and compete with all the things I need to deal with to get the tasks done that... also live on a screen.
Paper works because it's single-channel. No notifications, no tabs, no competing inputs. BrainDump is built on that same principle. You see one card. Not a list. Not a dashboard. One task, full screen. The only difference is the input is your voice instead of a pen, which matters when the executive function barrier is the act of writing things down in the first place.
Because task initiation has very little to do with tracking tasks. It’s far more internal than external, and apps can’t really fix that.