u/Interesting-Rub-2353

Salut tout le monde !

Je suis en pleine refonte de ma méthode de travail et je cherche une app de prise de notes qui fait un peu "tout" sans me ruiner.

En gros, je cherche le combo magique : Prise de notes + IA (pour résumer/expliquer) + Génération de quiz/flashcards automatique.

J'ai testé les classiques mais :

  • Notion : L'IA est payante (et cher pour un budget de pâtes au beurre).
  • Quizlet : C'est devenu ultra limité en version gratuite.
  • Anki : C'est gratuit et puissant, mais l'interface me donne l'impression d'être en 1995 et ça prend 1000 ans à configurer.

Est-ce que vous avez des alternatives (gratuites ou vraiment pas chères avec tarif étudiant) qui gèrent bien l'IA et les quiz ?

reddit.com
u/Interesting-Rub-2353 — 18 days ago

Hey,

I'll keep this short because I hate posts that oversell an idea.

I'm working on an app where you take a photo of your fridge, AI identifies what's in there, and suggests recipes based on what you actually have prioritizing stuff that's about to expire. You can also scan your grocery receipt. You cook. You don't throw anything away.

If your fridge is empty or you're missing something, you generate a shopping list with a single tap. You order from your usual supermarket without leaving the app.

Four agents work behind the scenes: one that monitors expiration dates, one that manages your weekly budget, one that plans your meals for the next 7 days, and one that tracks your nutrition if you want.

The recipes come from a curated database with video tutorials. The AI ​​doesn't generate anything, it chooses from tested recipes the ones that best match what you have in your fridge.

That's it. No subscription box, no meal kit, just your own fridge and your own supermarket.

The app I keep comparing myself to is Jow (French, ~8M users). They do recipes → shopping list → drive or delivery → cook. I want to do fridge → AI → recipes → shopping list → drive or delivery → cook. The difference sounds small but I think the use case is fundamentally different.

Genuinely want to know:

  1. Do you actually throw food away regularly because you forgot it was there?
  2. Would you bother taking a photo of your fridge or is that already too much effort?
  3. Is the "cook with what you have" problem real for you or do you just meal plan?
  4. Would you pay ~$8/month if it actually saved you money on groceries?

Please don't be nice. If this is a dumb idea I'd rather know now.

Also if your reply sounds like it was written by ChatGPT I'm going to ignore it. Real answers only.

reddit.com
u/Interesting-Rub-2353 — 24 days ago
▲ 1 r/apps

Hey,

I'll keep this short because I hate posts that oversell an idea.

I'm working on an app where you take a photo of your fridge, AI identifies what's in there, and suggests recipes based on what you actually have prioritizing stuff that's about to expire. You can also scan your grocery receipt. You cook. You don't throw anything away.

If your fridge is empty or you're missing something, you generate a shopping list with a single tap. You order from your usual supermarket without leaving the app.

Four agents work behind the scenes: one that monitors expiration dates, one that manages your weekly budget, one that plans your meals for the next 7 days, and one that tracks your nutrition if you want.

The recipes come from a curated database with video tutorials. The AI ​​doesn't generate anything, it chooses from tested recipes the ones that best match what you have in your fridge.

That's it. No subscription box, no meal kit, just your own fridge and your own supermarket.

The app I keep comparing myself to is Jow (French, ~8M users). They do recipes → shopping list → drive or delivery → cook. I want to do fridge → AI → recipes → shopping list → drive or delivery → cook. The difference sounds small but I think the use case is fundamentally different.

Genuinely want to know:

  1. Do you actually throw food away regularly because you forgot it was there?
  2. Would you bother taking a photo of your fridge or is that already too much effort?
  3. Is the "cook with what you have" problem real for you or do you just meal plan?
  4. Would you pay ~$8/month if it actually saved you money on groceries?

Please don't be nice. If this is a dumb idea I'd rather know now.

Also if your reply sounds like it was written by ChatGPT I'm going to ignore it. Real answers only.

reddit.com
u/Interesting-Rub-2353 — 24 days ago