Kevin Jordan launches ActimateAI for ADHD

- Kevin Jordan’s ActimateAI has launched Actimate, an ADHD-focused planner app for iPhone and Android built around tasks, habits, goals, calendars, and AI check-ins. - The app’s core pitch is “Pia,” an AI accountability partner that knows a user’s goals, habits, and calendar, then follows up proactively. - Actimate joins a crowded ADHD-productivity market by bundling planning, habit tracking, calendar sync, and accountability in one app. (actimate.io)

Kevin Jordan’s ActimateAI has launched Actimate, an ADHD-focused planner app for iPhone and Android built around AI accountability rather than a standard to-do list. (actimate.io) (apps.apple.com) Actimate’s website says Jordan built the app to address his own ADHD while “juggling ambitious goals, building companies, and raising a young family.” The company presents the product as one system for goals, habits, tasks, and calendars. (actimate.io) The app store listings describe three modes: Full Mode, External Brain, and Minimal Mode. They also name an AI assistant called Pia, which the company says knows a user’s goals, habits, and calendar and checks in proactively. (apps.apple.com) (play.google.com) Actimate’s feature set is built around common ADHD friction points that productivity apps often try to address: task paralysis, time blindness, and inconsistency. Its listings say the app uses a “Next Actions” view, quick capture, AI task breakdown, visual streaks, and calendar time blocking. (apps.apple.com) (actimate.io) The company also includes a Pomodoro timer, Google Calendar and Apple Calendar sync, and a feature for accountability partners who can view progress and send nudges. On Google Play, Actimate is listed as a free download with in-app purchases and more than 100 downloads. (play.google.com) Jordan has been publicly describing Actimate as an ADHD productivity product for months. His GitHub profile says he is a principal machine learning engineer and that he started building Actimate to tackle his own problems with ADHD. (github.com) That makes the launch less a sudden debut than a broader push to package several existing productivity ideas into one neurodivergent-focused app. The company’s site says the product is built on proactive accountability, the Getting Things Done method, and habit formation. (actimate.io) The pitch is straightforward: fewer disconnected tools, more follow-up. Whether that is enough to break through will depend on whether users stick with Pia and the app’s structured routines longer than they do with the usual planner cycle. (actimate.io)

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