The AI Pendant That Catches the Things You'll Forget by Dinner
Anticipy is an AI wearable pendant that listens to your conversations and completes the tasks you mention. For parents, this means catching the constant stream of logistics that gets mentioned once, in passing, and then lost in the noise of managing a family. The teacher says picture day is Tuesday. Your spouse mentions the pediatrician needs to be scheduled. A neighbor tells you soccer sign-ups close Friday. Each of these is a five-minute task, and each one gets buried under the next demand on your attention.
Anticipy catches these moments. It detects that you need to do something, and it does it. It does not record your family. It does not build profiles of your children. It does not monitor anyone. It listens for logistics, acts on them, and discards the audio. Below is what that looks like in a parent's actual day.
A Parent's Day with Anticipy
8:15 AM / School Drop-Off
You are walking your daughter to her classroom. The teacher catches you at the door: "Just a reminder, picture day is next Tuesday. There is an order form on the parent portal. And we still need two volunteers for the bake sale on the 15th."
Anticipy detects two items. It creates a calendar reminder for picture day on Tuesday with a note about the order form. It also sets a reminder about the bake sale volunteer sign-up. If the parent portal is web-accessible, it can navigate to the photo order form and start filling it in for you to review.
10:30 AM / Phone Call with Your Spouse
Midmorning, your spouse calls. Between work updates, they mention: "We need to schedule Ethan's annual checkup. The pediatrician said to come in before the end of the month. And can you look into that swim class at the community center? Registration opened this week."
Anticipy picks up both. It navigates to the pediatrician's online booking system and looks for available appointments before month's end, presenting you with options. Separately, it finds the community center's swim class registration page and starts the sign-up process. You get two confirmations to review instead of two items on a mental to-do list you will forget by lunch.
3:30 PM / Playground Conversation
At after-school pickup, another parent says: "Soccer sign-ups for spring close this Friday. I almost missed it last year. The link is on the league website." You reply: "Thanks, I need to get my son signed up before I forget."
Anticipy detects the registration intent. It searches for the local youth soccer league website, finds the spring registration page, and begins the process. It fills in what it can from your prior interactions and holds the form for you to review and submit. The sign-up that would have been a Friday night panic is handled Tuesday afternoon.
8:45 PM / After Bedtime
The kids are in bed. You are on the phone with your sister and say: "I really need to cancel that streaming service the kids do not watch anymore. And I should book a table for Mom's birthday dinner this Saturday."
Anticipy handles both. It navigates to the streaming service, finds the cancellation flow, and walks through it. It then searches for restaurant availability for Saturday and presents options. You confirm the cancellation and pick a restaurant, all without opening your laptop or pulling up a browser.
The Parent's Logistics Problem
Parents are unique among Anticipy's users because their action items come from everywhere: teachers, coaches, other parents, spouses, their own observations, school newsletters, doctor's offices, and the kids themselves. The information arrives at unpredictable times in unpredictable contexts. At drop-off. On the phone while cooking. In passing at the playground.
The common thread is that these tasks are mentioned once, briefly, in the middle of something else. There is no natural moment to stop and write a reminder. The teacher is talking to you while thirty other parents are trying to get through the door. Your spouse mentions it between two other topics on a five-minute call. The other parent drops it casually while the kids are running around.
Each task is small. Picture day is a five-minute errand. Soccer sign-up takes ten minutes. But parents typically juggle ten to twenty of these per week, and the penalty for missing one ranges from mild inconvenience (no pictures) to genuine stress (missed medical appointment). Anticipy catches them at the moment they are mentioned, before they can be lost.
Privacy and Children
Parents should know exactly how Anticipy handles audio in a household with children. Anticipy does not record, store, or transcribe any audio, including children's voices. It processes audio in real-time to detect actionable intent from the wearer's conversations, then discards the audio completely. There is no voice profile of your child. There is no stored conversation. There is no behavioral analysis.
The system is designed to detect intent expressed by or directed at the wearer. A child saying "I want juice" in the background does not generate a task. Anticipy focuses on conversational context that includes clear, actionable statements: "we need to schedule the checkup," "sign up for soccer before Friday," "cancel that subscription." Background noise, children playing, and general household audio are filtered out at the processing level.
What Anticipy Does Not Do for Parents
- ✗
Child monitoring. Anticipy does not track, record, or monitor children. It is not a parental control tool, a baby monitor, or a safety tracker.
- ✗
Family calendar management. Anticipy can create individual calendar events from detected intent, but it does not manage or sync shared family calendars. It does not resolve scheduling conflicts between family members.
- ✗
Homework help. If your child says "I need help with my math," Anticipy will not provide tutoring. It detects logistical tasks, not educational ones.
- ✗
Medical advice. Anticipy can schedule a pediatrician appointment. It cannot assess symptoms, recommend treatment, or make medical decisions.
- ✗
School communication. It does not read or respond to school emails, apps, or newsletters on your behalf. It catches tasks mentioned verbally in your conversations.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does Anticipy record my children's conversations?
No. Anticipy does not record anyone's conversations. It processes audio in real-time to detect actionable tasks, then discards the audio immediately. It does not build profiles of family members, store recordings of children, or retain any audio data. The only thing it keeps is the task it detected and the result.
What if my child says something that sounds like a task but isn't?
Anticipy uses a high confidence threshold for intent detection and focuses on statements made by the wearer or directed at the wearer. A child saying "I want pizza" in the background would not trigger a restaurant booking. The system is tuned to detect genuine, actionable intent from conversational context, not to act on every statement it overhears.
Can I use Anticipy to monitor or track my kids?
No, and it is not designed for that. Anticipy does not record, transcribe, or store conversations. It does not track location. It does not build behavioral profiles. It is a task execution tool: it catches logistics you mention and completes them. It is not a surveillance or monitoring product.
Does it work with school portals and parent apps?
Anticipy operates through a web browser. If your school's parent portal is accessible via the web and you have an active login session, Anticipy can navigate it to complete tasks like signing permission slips or registering for events. It cannot interact with native mobile apps directly.
Stop losing track of the little things.
Anticipy is $149 with the first year of service included.