Meet Kin: AI Assistant for Moms. It does the practical stuff every mom actually needs. Meal plans from a photo of your fridge. Schedules from a screenshot. Real grocery prices. The whole brain dump, sorted.
The appointments, the meals, the school emails, the ‘we’re out of sunscreen,’ the work deadline, the birthday gift for the party on Saturday. It’s not the tasks. It’s the remembering. And you are not doing too much or asking for too little. That’s not a problem to be optimized. It’s a life to be supported.
Not another chatbot that gives you a 12-paragraph answer. Kin does the thing.
Snap your fridge. Kin sees what you have, plans the week, and builds the grocery list for what’s missing.
Meal planningNot estimates. Actual prices at your actual store, with a cart you can send straight to Kroger or Amazon.
Real pricesSay everything on your mind. Out loud, messy, at 10pm. Kin turns it into tasks, reminders, and calendar events.
Brain dumpWake up to your day already thought through: schedule, weather, what needs deciding, and Kin’s honest take.
Daily briefingKin learns your family’s rhythm and reminds you before the sunscreen, snacks, or shampoo run out, with a reorder link ready.
RestockSizes, allergies, teacher names, who hates cheese touching anything. Kin keeps track so you don’t have to.
Family memory
Hi, I’m K. Full-time corporate job, two boys, and zero tech background. Kin wasn’t built in a boardroom by people who studied moms. It was built at my kitchen table, at 11pm, between a permission slip and an email I’d been putting off for three days. I started this blog to prove moms could still do it all, then nearly quit because doing it all left no room for anything else. Then I found AI, and it gave me my time back. So I did the most unreasonable thing possible: I built the app I couldn’t find. No developers. No funding. Just a mom, a laptop, and a to-do list that finally met its match.
18 pages. Plain language. Zero jargon. Everything a non-techy mom needs to actually understand AI and start using it today. Because you don't just deserve the answer. You deserve to understand why it's the right one.