A personal command center for the way you actually work
Your tasks, your calendar, the people you're in touch with, your notes, your journal, your vault — in one place, with the connections between them intact.
Currently in private use among family and friends. By invitation only.
How to get started
New to Atlas? Here's how to go from invitation to your first captured task in under two minutes.
Check your invitation email
Atlas is invite-only. Look for an invitation from Atlas in your inbox — it has a link that takes you straight to the sign-in page.
Sign in with Google or a magic link
Click 'Continue with Google' to sign in instantly, or enter your email to receive a one-time magic link — no password needed.
Capture your first task
You'll land in Tasks. Hit the '+' button or press ⌘⇧I to open Quick Capture and add your first item. That's it — you're in.
What Atlas aspires to be
Atlas is opinionated — deliberately so. It wasn't designed by committee or shaped by customer surveys. It was built from one person's conviction about how work should be organised: that your tasks, calendar, relationships, notes, journal, and most important records shouldn't live in separate tools with no awareness of each other.
The meeting you have tomorrow, the person you're meeting, the project you'll discuss, the notes you took last week — instead of living in separate apps, they live together. When you reference a person, project, idea, or earlier thought, Atlas recognises it and creates the connection. You don't have to think about organising — the structure builds itself from how you actually work.
That opinionated foundation is both its limitation and its strength. No customer feedback was collected, no user research was run. It was built for a specific way of working — and if that way resonates with you, it fits like something purpose-built. If you've tried OmniFocus and Notion and Things and a calendar app and a journaling app and felt the friction of moving between them, Atlas is for you.
Six modules, one system
Each module is useful on its own. Together they become something more.
Tasks
Your inbox for everything that needs to happen. Capture a thought in two seconds and it lives somewhere you'll actually see it again. Organise into projects when you're ready, or leave things in the inbox until you have time to think. The bar for capture is low; the bar for focus is high.
Calendar
Your time, visible in one place. Atlas connects to your existing Google Calendar and shows your meetings alongside your tasks — so when you're planning your week, you see both what you've committed to and what you want to get done.
People
The contacts and conversations that matter, kept warm. Atlas connects to your Google Contacts and helps you remember the people in your life — not as data records, but as ongoing relationships. When you open a person, you see what's been on your mind about them and what's coming up.
Notes
The thinking you want to keep. Project briefs, meeting notes, reading notes, ideas. Atlas's notes are clean markdown documents — but with one important difference: they connect. A note from a meeting links to the people who were there and the calendar event.
Journals
The ongoing record of your days. A daily journal for processing — what happened, what you learned, what's on your mind. It's private, simple, and lives alongside everything else. When you reference a project in your journal entry, you can come back to that project and see the entries that mentioned it.
Vault
Secure storage for the records that define your life — passports, property documents, legal agreements, digital credentials. The things you rarely need but absolutely cannot lose. Kept in one place, private, always findable when it matters.
Request access
Atlas is currently invite-only, shared among a small circle of family and friends. If you're interested in trying it when more spots open up, leave your details below.