DidLog is a weekly efficiency system built around two pieces of paper and an AI that pays attention.
Sunday, you write your plan: what you did last week, what you want this week, the hours you actually have. You photograph it.
Every day, you write what happened: free hours, yesterday's reality, what you should have done. You sign another user's name at the bottom, and photograph that too.
The AI returns a verdict — a daily efficiency score, one sentence in your chosen persona's voice, and up to three active adjustments designed to bend your trajectory upward. It caps adjustments at three because willpower is finite. Each one is tracked as a living object: proposed, active, sustaining, slipping, renegotiated, or abandoned. When something stops working, the persona renegotiates. When something succeeds, it graduates and makes room for the next highest-leverage gap.
You get a 12-week rolling efficiency graph and a long-horizon view of where you're heading at your current rate. Absence counts as zero. Skipping doesn't pause the line, it bends it down.
The social layer is opt-in and curiosity-driven. When another user signs your name on their paper, you see their day blurred. Unblur sends them yours in return. Skip is free, no penalty. Both sides choose, page by page, what to share.
At the end of every month, your 30 pages collapse into one composite image — a portrait made of your own handwriting. Complete a 12-week goal and DidLog generates a narrative video summarizing it from your actual data.
Sessions are 60–90 seconds, two or three times a day, plus a 5-minute Sunday ritual. The product is designed to stay out of your way. You live your life. The paper and the AI keep you honest about it.