Tried every AI assistant?Del's the one that sticks.

You've tried the task apps, the voice assistants, and the AI chatbots, and none stuck. Del is different on purpose: proactive, living in the texting app you already use, and actually remembering you — so Del gets better over time instead of starting from zero. No app to open and no system to maintain, so nothing to abandon.

Why does every AI assistant let you down?

You're not anti-technology. You tried them all — the task manager, Siri, the new AI chatbots — and started each one excited. Then the same thing happened every time. The task app became a second job, and the red overdue tasks just sat there glaring at you until you quit. The chatbot forgot you between sessions, so every conversation started from zero and you paid a "context tax" re-explaining who you are. The voice assistant mostly just set timers and alarms for you. And the self-hosted agent hit a wall of setup you couldn't climb. You don't doubt an assistant could help. You doubt this one will be different.

How is Del different from the ones you quit?

Del is built around the three things that broke before. Del is proactive — reaching out first, so the things that fall through the cracks aren't the ones you forgot to ask about. Del remembers you — people, dates, and the little things, across time — so you never re-explain yourself, and Del gets better the longer you text instead of resetting. And Del lives in your texts — iMessage, WhatsApp, Telegram, or SMS — so there's no new app to open and no system to maintain. There's nothing to set up, which means there's nothing to abandon.

A week without dropping a ball

You mention to Del, in passing, "I have a job interview Thursday." You don't make a task or set a reminder. Friday morning, before you've thought about it, Del texts:

"How'd the interview go yesterday? 🤞"

Del remembered without being told to remember. Later that week, a friend's kid comes up, and Del already knows the date — so the right weekend Del pings: "Mia's party is Saturday — want me to find a couple gift ideas?" And at 9 PM, when the "what am I forgetting?" dread creeps in, you don't open a guilt-trip list. You text "what's on my plate tomorrow?" and get a calm, prioritized answer that already knows what matters to you. A full week, no balls dropped — and you never opened an app to make it happen.

What people who stuck with Del say

You've heard "remembers you and reaches out first" before. Here's someone for whom Del actually stuck: Arjun, Private Equity at MUSEDATA, said, "I'm honestly really impressed by [Del]. What I like most is how proactive the agent is. It follows up, asks you questions, and it learns about you — I can see it increasing my productivity by a lot." That's the part every other assistant promised and broke: Del learns who you are, and the relationship compounds.

Frequently asked

I've tried every AI assistant and none stuck. Why is Del different?

Most assistants are reactive and forget you between chats, so you re-explain yourself every time. Del is proactive — Del reaches out first — and Del remembers people, dates, and details across time, so Del gets more useful the longer you keep texting. Del also lives in your texts, so there's no new app to remember to open.

Is Del just another app I'll forget to check?

No. The whole problem is remembering to open things — so Del doesn't make you. Del lives in iMessage, WhatsApp, Telegram, and SMS, and texts you first. You don't open a dashboard or check a list; Del comes to you in the thread you already use.

Do I have to set up and maintain a system?

No. There's no project setup, no labels, no filters, and nothing to keep alive. You just text Del like you'd text a friend. Setup is none, and getting started takes about five minutes — so there's no elaborate system to abandon a month later.

Will Del actually remember what I share?

Yes — memory is the point. Del remembers people, preferences, and commitments across time and builds a real understanding of you. Mention a date or a name once and Del holds it, so you stop paying the "two minutes re-explaining who I am" tax on every conversation.

How much does Del cost?

Del is $20 a month, flat. You get two weeks free first — long enough to feel the proactivity and watch the memory compound before you pay anything.

You've tried the rest.
Del actually sticks.

Take 5 minutes to meet Del — no app, nothing to set up.