You don’t remember when things happened. You remember where you were.

Most tools organize information by time: feeds, lists, and endless streams of content.

But memory doesn’t work that way. It’s tied to place. Where something happened, what was around you, how it felt.

WhereNote is built around that idea: a map-first system designed to match how people naturally remember, explore, and return to places.

Built for how you use places

Save & organize

Create your own map of places that matter. With notes, markers, and context tied to where it happened.

Explore

See places through location-based context, so what you find is grounded in real experiences, not just posts or reviews.

Return & revisit

Go back to places with memory intact. What you did, what you liked, and what to do next time.

Better experiences start before you go… and last after you leave.

When everything is visible, nothing stands out.

Places get buried in feeds, lost in lists, and reduced to disconnected reviews. You might find something, but you don’t always remember it, trust it, or return to it.

WhereNote explores a different model: organizing information around where things actually happen.

The result is simpler, more meaningful:
You remember what mattered, discover what’s relevant, and make decisions with more confidence.

Designed with intent.

Fewer, more relevant inputs
No feeds. No endless lists. Just information that helps in real moments.

Private by design
Your map is yours. You decide what’s kept, shared, or visible.

Grounded in real places
Everything is tied to location, so context isn’t lost.

Early, by design.

WhereNote is currently preparing for a live, invite-only, full-feature test.

Limited live, real-world testing coming soon