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@dr_cintas (2026-05-10) spotlights Nori, a free Family AI assistant that…

Brief

Nori, a free Family AI assistant described by @dr_cintas on 2026-05-10, centralizes family coordination—calendars, tasks, shopping, meal planning and recipes—via voice, photo, and email inputs and builds a persistent family memory for details like teachers' names and Wi‑Fi. Nori also runs a Mother's Day contest with a $1,000 prize and public product links.

Why it matters

@dr_cintas (2026-05-10) spotlights Nori, a free Family AI assistant that consolidates calendars, tasks, shopping lists, meal plans, and recipes into one shared system and accepts multimodal inputs—voice, photos, forwarded emails, and fridge photos—to import events and suggest recipes.

Key details

  • Nori provides a persistent family memory to store details like a kid's teacher's name, Wi‑Fi password, or pickup instructions so any family member can query forgotten facts.
  • Nori launched a Mother's Day challenge offering a $1,000 prize for the best AI product/demo tailored to a wife or mom (heynori.go.link/ara5d); product link: heynori.go.link/ijNoA. The author claims this is the first serious AI effort focused on family coordination.
Source evidence

AI tools have transformed individual productivity. Scheduling, writing, coding, research.

But there's one system that handles more complexity than most jobs, and has zero AI infrastructure: the family.

Nori is trying to change that. It's a free Family AI assistant that consolidates calendars, tasks, shopping lists, meal plans, and recipes into a single shared system.

The input is what makes it interesting. You don't navigate menus. You talk to it.

→ Voice: "Add soccer practice Tuesday at 4" 
→ Photo: Snap a school flyer and it extracts the event details automatically 
→ Email: Forward a semester schedule and dates get imported 
→ Fridge photo: It suggests recipes based on what you have, accounting for allergies and preferences, then builds a shopping list

It also has a family memory. Tell Nori your kid's teacher's name, your WiFi password, or a pickup detail. When anyone forgets, they just ask.

They also just launched something fun for Mother's Day where you build an AI product or build an AI product demo based on your wife's or mom's needs, and get a $1,000 prize for the best creation → heynori.go.link/ara5d

Here is also the link to the @Nori_FamilyAI product: heynori.go.link/ijNoA

Thanks to the team for partnering with me in this post.

The family coordination problem is real. Most tech has ignored it. This is the first serious attempt at treating family life as a system worth building AI for.