Zyve is a context-aware day planner built for real life. It upgrades events with live intelligence like traffic, weather, nearby places, and timing gaps so plans stay realistic, not theoretical. Designed for people coordinating with others, Zyve helps you adjust on the fly, avoid clashes, and move through the day calmly instead of constantly reacting.
Zyve came out of a very real problem at home. My wife and I were constantly double-checking plans, who’s handling our daughter’s doctor appointment, did we agree on the time, will traffic make us late, is parking going to be a mess, should we leave earlier because of the weather?
We tried Google Calendar and a few other tools, but they’re built around static events, not families or real-world coordination. They don’t adapt when traffic changes, weather turns bad, plans shift, or when place-specific details like parking actually matter. That gap caused more back-and-forth than clarity.
So I started building Zyve as a context-aware day planner, one that adds real-world intelligence like traffic, weather, nearby places, and timing gaps directly into shared plans. The goal isn’t more notifications, but fewer “wait, did we account for this?” moments.
This has been built slowly and intentionally as a solo project, shaped by everyday household planning friction for families and roommates.
I’d love to hear how you coordinate plans today and where things usually fall apart for you.
Hey Product Hunt!
Zyve came out of a very real problem at home. My wife and I were constantly double-checking plans, who’s handling our daughter’s doctor appointment, did we agree on the time, will traffic make us late, is parking going to be a mess, should we leave earlier because of the weather?
We tried Google Calendar and a few other tools, but they’re built around static events, not families or real-world coordination. They don’t adapt when traffic changes, weather turns bad, plans shift, or when place-specific details like parking actually matter. That gap caused more back-and-forth than clarity.
So I started building Zyve as a context-aware day planner, one that adds real-world intelligence like traffic, weather, nearby places, and timing gaps directly into shared plans. The goal isn’t more notifications, but fewer “wait, did we account for this?” moments.
This has been built slowly and intentionally as a solo project, shaped by everyday household planning friction for families and roommates.
I’d love to hear how you coordinate plans today and where things usually fall apart for you.
Regards,
Bharath