I love the concept. +1 for an android version.<p>One feature to add might be a view for one year ago today. There are journals that have 365 pages and you write a line for each year of the highlights of the day. As you write the new year's line you end up reviewing what you were doing in previous years. It seems like you have most of the pieces to do this.
120 points in 1 hour is a nice start. I think you can add a self-referencing entry to your achievement list: "Launched <i>Remember Win</i> App"
I love the sentiment and inspiration. I think this is great for fighting burnout and getting back in the game. The design of the app is really clean and it looks great.<p>That being said, I feel like the replies here are a bit of a hugbox. As far as the app's value itself goes, I don't see any benefit of this compared to an accomplished.txt file. In fact, a txt file is better because it covers more use cases and has a simpler interface(just start typing).<p>Why should I use this rather than a notepad? Look for features you can add that would be useful for manipulating data about accomplishments. Find ways to set the app apart.<p>Accomplishment ranking could be one useful feature. Then you could list even the tiny accomplishments, but if you want to just look at the big accomplishments you can always sort based on ranking to clear out the noise.
Entangld, this is a great app. I hope you will find some time for healing.<p>Stress burns the mind in the same way as physical activity burns the muscle. At some point you need to give your mind a rest. I suggest this book:<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Full-Catastrophe-Living-Wisdom-Illness/dp/0739358588" rel="nofollow">http://www.amazon.com/Full-Catastrophe-Living-Wisdom-Illness...</a><p>or this one:<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Wherever-You-Go-There-Are/dp/1401307787" rel="nofollow">http://www.amazon.com/Wherever-You-Go-There-Are/dp/140130778...</a><p>This should help you keep your strengths intact regardless of your current situations ... who is to say that next endeavor will be better than the previous one.
Is the information stored on the device or on your servers somewhere? I like the idea but I'd also like to keep this data for longer than a company may be around for.
Great job! I started writing down my daily "wins" after reading about Marc Andreeessen and his anti-todo list. <a href="http://blog.idonethis.com/marc-andreessen-productivity-trick/" rel="nofollow">http://blog.idonethis.com/marc-andreessen-productivity-trick...</a>
I like the concept, good job on getting it out there! However the choice of font (Lobster) pains me, there was a period where it was so overused that it's almost on the level of Comic Sans at this point. #sadface
This concept is powerful, wrote about it recently :)<p><a href="https://medium.com/@jasdev/small-moments-159df5db89a5" rel="nofollow">https://medium.com/@jasdev/small-moments-159df5db89a5</a>
I clicked through expecting an app that offered a nostalgic walk down memory lane with screenshots and features of the Windows operating system. I'm not sure why that is the first thing that came to mind, but it did.<p>While that would have been moderately amusing, the actual application is a much more useful and helpful concept.<p>Great job on launching something!
It's a great idea and I can see a lot of people using such an app. But I don't feel like it's really productive, or even healthy to look too much at the past. Reminds me a quote "if you spend your day thinking about yesterday, what will you do tomorrow?"
Just downloaded it, great app.<p>I find critique useful, I hope you do too. I do not like the notifications, how you set them. I would prefer to wake up to my morning alarm and see a random awesome thing I did the day or week before, along with a motivational 1-a-day quote.
I have been thinking of making an app to help me do regular journaling. The idea is that it iss quick and easy enough to do in one minute per day and that it would help me remember notable events in my life. This fills that niche really well!<p>One thing I wanted in my app was a timeline view so that I could see an overview of the most notable events in my life, and drill into certain periods for more detail. I think you could do that with this app.<p>Lastly, provide a way to export data. I want to remember these things forever, even if you decide not to continue supporting the app.
Neat concept. In my experience its helpful to reset the clock and remember the mindset you were in when you were happiest to help guide you towards where you should go next.
Great idea. It seems like something that would be incorporated in Facebook given it's ostensible goal of documenting your life. Perhaps they'll even hear about your idea and release a "new Achievements" feature in the coming months. Have you considered building your own on top of their api/platform to increase the "virality" of remember win?
Great concept. I'm sat here, having been instructed by our investors to write up our achievements in the last two years, drawing a total blank. I know we've achieved lots of stuff, but I can't view anything as an achievement, so so far, I've managed "not totally failing" - which I don't think is quite what they're after.<p>Ho hum.
I like this. Last year I started writing down "one cool thing I've done" every day and it definitely helps me appreciate my life more. Recently I had a couple of days where I couldn't come up with anything to note, which reminded me to check if I'm still doing what I love and not spending too many days with only tedious work.
Reminds me of a gift my father gave my daughter when she recently had her first child "The Happiness Project One-Sentence Journal for Mothers" [1]<p>[1] <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Happiness-Project-One-Sentence-Journal-Mothers/dp/0385348657/" rel="nofollow">http://www.amazon.com/Happiness-Project-One-Sentence-Journal...</a>
I created a notepad document two weeks ago to track a.) each day that I do not move my car (bike everywhere instead) and b.) each meal that I prepare myself and eat in. I have ambitions to start tracking some more day-to-day goals like these.<p>I'm giving this app a shot to see if it has benefits over the .txt file. Thanks!
very nice!
I have a few ideas but have never done mobile development and frankly it seems a bit overwhelming for the 2-5 spare hours in a week.
Is the best way to get started to create a reactive site and port it into an app?
I run an online game, and I think I'm going to try this as a notice for players of positive achievements in the past. Perhaps it makes them all feel like they are doing better than they feel they are.<p>Great concept.
I'd love to hear more about your actual story, how you came to realize you were burning out and what kind of changes you made in your life to fight it. Did you leave your job to develop this app?
That's a great idea and good looking app. I had kind of a similar idea: an app that would preserve nice things said about you by others to counteract all the negativity.
I'm really impressed by all these polished launch pages that Show HN folks design. Lack of such is an admittedly lame reason why I refrain from posting projects on HN.
Serious question: Knowing what it's like to feel burned out,I don't understand how you found the energy to create the app. Did you create it after recovering ?
Was this influenced by Reddit's "Daily 3?[1]"<p>[1] <a href="http://www.reddit.com/r/Mydaily3/" rel="nofollow">http://www.reddit.com/r/Mydaily3/</a>
This is so great. I have a text file named "1000 Things" that I update weekly. The file has headings "I am an aspiring ____", and I list the things I did that week to move closer to that goal, counting down from 1000.<p>So my questions...Is it possible to load up a bunch of existing data in to the app? And would there be a way to implement a count of the achievements for each category?
don't use this quote on your app<p><a href="https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/10328969/stayhungrystayfoolish.png" rel="nofollow">https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/10328969/stayhungrystayf...</a>