Stop collecting ideas. Start finishing them.
You know the pile. Forty-one voice memos. A notes app you're a little scared of. That genius shower thought — gone by breakfast. Ahdea catches the thought, hands it back making sense, and gives you one small next move. Then it sticks around until the thing is actually done. Or until you let it go on purpose, which also counts.
What an Ahdea.
You're in. Your number is being engraved as we speak — check your inbox, it'll say hello properly. The first hundred get something made by hand. Actual hands.
Ahdea is alive and working right now — a small crew of early users has it today. It just isn't public yet. Got a personal link? You're in before the doors even exist. No link? The waitlist above is the doorbell.
Make it feel like an app. Because it is one.
Ahdea lives on the web for now — no App Store line to stand in. If you've got an invite link, open it in Safari and give it a proper home:
- Tap the Share button — the square with the little arrow.
- Scroll down a touch and tap “Add to Home Screen.”
- Tap Add. Done.
Full screen, its own icon, no browser chrome — it feels native because it basically is. On Android it's the same trick from Chrome's menu. And a proper iOS app is the next release — same app, same ideas, one more way to catch them.
The first hundred people get more than early access.
A numbered kit, made by hand — a journal for catching ideas, a tote for carrying them (it says “Bagful of Ahdeas”, because it is one), and a thank-you note written with an actual pen. Not merch. Tools. One of one hundred, with your number on it. When people ask about the bag, and they will, you were here first.
You mumble. It makes sense of you.
Walks are where ideas happen. Notes apps are where they die.
That's the whole product, in one picture. A messy thought goes in. A clear idea comes back — with somewhere to go. No folders were harmed.
ah · idea → ahdea — the little sound a thought makes when it finally makes sense.
First it's a noun. “What an Ahdea!” Then it's a verb. “Just ahdea it.” We apologize in advance for how often you're going to say it.