Say it once.
Get a checklist back.
You already talk through your to-dos in your head. Sentio transcribes the memo and pulls the actual tasks out of it, so the plan you spoke doesn't evaporate by the time you sit down to work.
How it works
From spoken thought to done.
Talk it out
Open Sentio and say whatever is in your head — a plan for tomorrow, a debrief after a call, a list of things you keep forgetting. No structure required.
Sentio transcribes and reads for intent
It doesn't just write down what you said. It looks for commitments, deadlines, and things phrased like a task — 'I need to,' 'remind me to,' 'follow up on' — and separates those from context and rambling.
You get a checklist, not a wall of text
Action items show up as a distinct list under the transcript, each one editable and checkable off. The full transcript is still there if you need the context behind a task.
Reminders, if you want them
Turn any extracted action item into a reminder with a due date, so it doesn't just sit in a list you forget to reopen.
Common questions
How accurate is the task extraction?
Sentio flags anything phrased as a commitment or to-do based on the language you actually used, not a rigid template. You can edit, delete, or add action items after the fact — the extraction is a starting point, not a final word.
What if I don't say anything task-shaped?
Then you get a transcript and summary with no action items listed, which is correct — Sentio does not invent tasks that were not there.
Can I turn an action item into a reminder?
Yes. Any extracted action item can become a reminder with a due date and notification, directly from the note.
Does this work for a list of unrelated tasks, not just one topic?
Yes — a single voice note covering several unrelated things ("call the dentist, follow up with Jamie, buy milk") extracts each as its own separate action item.