It started with a missed call. Two of us, still in high school, juggling classes, side projects and the small businesses we were trying to get off the ground. There were never enough hours. Something always slipped — a callback, a deadline, a reply we meant to send three days ago.
So we built a little assistant for ourselves. At first it just answered the phone when we were in lessons. Then it started managing our calendars. Then it remembered the things we kept forgetting. Before long, we were running half our lives through a chat window between classes.
Our friends noticed. They wanted one too. That's when it stopped being a school project and started being Chronos — named after time itself, because time is the one thing none of us could make more of.
We're not a big company. We're two students with a laptop each, a shared obsession, and a belief that everyone deserves an assistant — not just executives with a payroll. So we made one that lives in your pocket, answers your phone, and costs less than a couple of coffees a month.
"We didn't want a smarter to-do list. We wanted our evenings back."
Every feature has to earn its place by giving you minutes back. If it doesn't save you time, it doesn't ship.
Not a menu, not a bot. Chronos talks like a capable human assistant — because that's what makes you actually use it.
Your calls, notes and memory are yours. We don't sell data, and we never will. That's a promise, not a policy.
We keep it affordable on purpose. An assistant shouldn't be a luxury — it should be the default.
Writes the code, breaks the code, fixes the code at 2am. Obsessed with making the assistant feel instant.
Designs how Chronos thinks and talks. Spends way too long making a single sentence sound human.
We're keeping our names off the site for now — we'd rather you judge the product than the people. Say hi anyway: hello@trychronos.online
A weekend hack to answer our own phones during class. It worked a little too well.
Chronos booked an appointment for a friend without anyone touching a phone. We knew we had something.
One brain, two channels. Chat and calls finally shared the same memory.
Out of the group chat and into the world. This is just the start.
Help two students prove that everyone deserves an assistant. Your hours are waiting.