One infinite note. That's the whole app.
Coming Soon - Fall 2026Note-taking apps have become productivity theaters. They promise that with the right organizational system—tags, folders, backlinks, graphs, templates—you'll finally capture and organize all your thoughts. But you spend more time organizing than actually writing.
Mono rejects this completely. One note. Everything goes in it. No folders, no tags, no organization system to maintain. Just open the app and start typing. Your grocery list lives next to your novel draft lives next to your meeting notes. It's chaos, but it's honest chaos.
You have one infinite, scrollable note. Write whatever you want, whenever you want. The most recent stuff is at the top. Older stuff scrolls down into the archive of your past.
Search is cmd+F. That's it. No fancy semantic search, no AI summaries, no knowledge graphs. Just find the thing you wrote and get back to work.
Your entire life in one scrollable note. Recent stuff at the top, older stuff below. Scroll back in time to see what you were thinking about last month, last year.
Command+F finds what you need. No boolean operators, no advanced query syntax. Just type what you're looking for.
Every keystroke is saved. No save button, no manual syncing, no anxiety about losing work. Close the app mid-sentence and it's still there when you come back.
The paradox of note-taking apps is that the more features they have, the less you actually write. You're too busy maintaining the system. Mono eliminates the system entirely.
When everything is in one place, you don't have to decide where something goes. You don't have to maintain a hierarchy. You don't have to remember what tag you used. You just write, and trust that search will find it later.
It turns out that chronological order—the order you wrote things—is actually a pretty good organizational system. You remember when you wrote something ("that was during the summer project") more often than you remember what folder you put it in.
People who have tried every note-taking app and ended up back at a single text file. People who want to write, not organize. People who are tired of productivity theater. People who trust themselves to find what they need without a complicated filing system.
The core note editing is working. We're optimizing performance for notes with millions of characters (some of our beta testers write a lot). Sync is next, then we ship.