Memory over metrics.
We don't count followers, likes-as-scoreboard, or streaks. The reward for opening Timents is the memory itself, not a number.
Our story
Timents started from a simple frustration: the apps that hold our most important photos are designed to keep us moving past them. We wanted the opposite — a place that asks you to stop, just for a second, and remember.
“Your life didn't happen in a ranked feed. It happened on days — and the same day comes back every year, whether an app notices or not.”
The idea
In Timents, the year is metadata — never the thing you navigate by. You move through your life by month and day, and every year you've kept lines up beneath it. June 12th isn't a point in a timeline. It's a place you can return to, and find everyone who was there.
That one decision shapes the whole app: Today opens on this date, Memories is a calendar, chapters fill in by day, and WorldDay only ever shows up on its own date. One pattern, everywhere.
One date. Every year you've kept it.
What we believe
We don't count followers, likes-as-scoreboard, or streaks. The reward for opening Timents is the memory itself, not a number.
Your life didn't happen in a ranked feed. It happened on days. So we organize everything by month and day, and treat the year as a quiet label.
Every moment starts with you choosing who's in the room. Nothing is public unless you say so, and we never sell or trade your memories.
No infinite scroll, no autoplay, no manufactured urgency. Timents is meant to be opened, felt, and closed — not endured.
Who it's for
Friends and families keeping a shared record. People documenting a year, a relationship, a child growing up, a trip worth keeping. Anyone tired of handing their memories to a feed that monetizes their attention.
Where we are
Timents is in private beta on iPhone via TestFlight. That means it's improving quickly, and some things will change. We'd rather have you in early and shaping it than wait for a perfect launch. If you try it, tell us what you think.