Spotting what recurs
Bonblick tells apart what comes back regularly from what you bought just once. So you see what your everyday life really runs on.
Bonblick starts with a photo. But the memory it builds can do more than look back. This page shows what's already here today, what's growing now, and the idea behind it. No dates, no promises with a deadline — just the direction.
A lot of what sounds like "the future" is already built. It works quietly in the background — and waits until you ask for it.
Bonblick tells apart what comes back regularly from what you bought just once. So you see what your everyday life really runs on.
For your groceries Bonblick shows nutrition facts like protein — as a quiet hint, never a counting task. Set a goal and it mirrors your real purchases against it.
From your receipts Bonblick spots subscriptions, warranty periods and return windows, and pings you before a deadline passes. Reminding, not nagging — and only if you switch it on.
One photo, and Bonblick answers immediately: what you bought, what stands out, what's shifting. Plain and brief, no judgment.
Once Bonblick knows what you like, what you avoid and what's in your pantry, a few helpers follow naturally. We build them in the order they pay off for you — not on a quarterly plan. These are directions, not a checklist.
What you buy regularly and what's running low, Bonblick already knows. Letting a shopping list grow from that — sorted by store — isn't a new idea, it's the fruit of what's already there. Led by memory, not by an algorithm.
You're at the shelf, a jar in your hand, and can't remember: did you like this? Hold Bonblick to the barcode, and the answer comes from your own history — not from strangers' ratings.
The most common shopping pain: someone gets sent out and comes back with the wrong product. A shared mirror — what we like, what we avoid, what's in the pantry — makes it a household, not an audience. Private stays private; only what you actively share is shared.
Say "more protein" or "cheaper", and Bonblick gives you the signals — mirrored against your real purchases, without a wagging finger. You decide whether it was a lot. Bonblick only shows what was.
A shared memory and several devices need an anchor. So an account and sync are coming — as a deliberate gesture, not a requirement. Local and sign-up-free stays the default. Your data is yours; you control what's shared.
In the long run Bonblick isn't an app you open anymore. It's a quiet layer in daily life: when you're in the drugstore wondering which cream you liked, you know again. When you stand undecided at the shelf, Bonblick reminds you of what you'd long forgotten. When you move abroad, you simply take your taste profile with you.
Others will try something similar. Banks fail at the item level, big platforms at trust, retailers at seeing beyond their own store. The real protection isn't an algorithm — it's a refusal: of every path to turn your data into money. What carries us is built restraint — and that can only be built once.
Every feature on this page arrives as an offer, not a default. You switch on what you need — the rest stays quiet.
Without an account, local on your device — that's how Bonblick keeps working. Sharing and sync are a deliberate gesture, not the price of admission.
No ads, no sharing with third parties, no profiles for others. This isn't a phase — it's the moat.