Our phones were designed to be addictive. This is how we fight back.
We pick up our phones to check one thing and find ourselves doom scrolling 40 minutes later. Driftless makes that gap impossible to ignore.
Android first. Free to start. No spam.
Three steps. Two seconds each.
Set your intent
You unlock your phone and tap why you're here. "Check weather." "Reply to Mom." "Just browsing." Takes two seconds.
Use your phone
Do your thing. Driftless quietly watches which apps you actually use and for how long. No interruptions.
See the gap
Lock the phone and see how reality compared to your intent. Over time, patterns emerge. You start drifting less.
Here's what a drift looks like
No judgment. Just the truth. You decide what to do with it.
It's not a willpower problem. It's a design problem.
The biggest tech companies in the world spend billions figuring out how to keep us scrolling. Infinite feeds, autoplay, notification dots. Our attention is the product they're selling.
That's time not spent with our kids. Not doing our best work. Not sleeping. And they're counting on us blaming ourselves for it.
Driftless shows us where our attention actually goes, so we can decide where it should go instead.
We're not anti-phone. We're anti-autopilot.
Tech is incredible. We can learn anything, build anything, connect with anyone. The problem isn't our phones — it's using them without thinking.
Driftless helps us use them on purpose.
There's never been more opportunity. Can we focus long enough to grab it?
New tools, new platforms, new ways to build and create. More within reach than ever. But none of it matters if our best hours vanish into a feed we didn't choose.
This isn't about discipline. It's about not letting the most exciting moment in a generation pass us by because our attention was somewhere else.
What Driftless is not
An app blocker that treats us like children who can't be trusted
A coach that arms us with awareness so we can fight back
Guilt-tripping screen time reports that blame us for a rigged game
Honest intel on where our attention actually went and why
Another notification competing for the attention we're trying to protect
A quiet coach in our corner that speaks up only when it matters
Start noticing.
Join the waitlist for early access on Android.
Free to start. No spam.