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Listora.pro
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Listora is a real-time collaborative list app built for people who share their lives. Open the app and see all your lists โ groceries, errands, travel, home projects. Tap into one and you're in: a clean input at the top, your items below. Check something off and it moves to completed. Swipe left to delete. When a collaborator joins your list, their avatar appears at the top. A typing indicator shows when they're adding something. Their item appears on your screen instantly โ no refresh, no delay. A subtle color tint on each item row shows who added what. AI Assistant โ describe what you need in plain language. "BBQ for 10 people" returns a full item list with quantities. Review, select, add. Powered by Claude Sonnet. Recurring Lists โ set any list to reset daily, weekly, or monthly. Checked items are automatically removed on schedule. Your standing items stay put. Smart Sharing โ send a link, collaborators join instantly. Remove someone in one tap โ the share link is invalidated automatically for security. Notifications โ get an email digest when collaborators modify your list. Removed collaborators are notified immediately. Installs on your phone like a native app. Fully bilingual EN/FR. Works offline. Free โ 3 lists, sharing, recurring, mobile. Pro $4/month โ unlimited lists, unlimited collaborators, AI assistant. Team $12/month โ shared spaces, analytics, unified billing. Fast, smart, and out of your way.
Listora doesn't try to be a project manager. It doesn't have subtasks, dependencies, Gantt charts, or integrations with 200 other tools. It's a list app that takes collaboration seriously โ fast, smart, and out of your way. ๐ฏ๐ฏ
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Listora.pro's answer:
Listora is built for real collaboration, not just list-making. Most list apps (Todoist, Any.do, Google Keep) are designed for individual productivity. Sharing feels like an afterthought. Listora is built from the ground up for people who share lists with others โ families, roommates, couples, small teams. What sets it apart: Real-time sync is instant โ when your partner checks off milk at the store, you see it disappear on your phone in under a second. No refresh, no delay. That's Socket.io doing its job. The AI assistant is genuinely useful โ type "lasagna for 6" and Claude generates the full ingredient list instantly. Not a gimmick, actually saves time. Recurring lists solve a real pain โ your weekly grocery list resets automatically every Sunday. You never rebuild it from scratch. Author colors show who added what โ in a shared list, every item is color-coded by who added it. You always know if it was you or your partner who added that third bottle of wine. The honest competitive advantage: It's fast, mobile-first, works as a PWA (installable on your phone like a native app), bilingual EN/FR, and at $4/month Pro it's priced fairly against Todoist ($5) and Any.do ($6) while offering better real-time collaboration than both.
Listora.pro's answer:
Primary audience: Connected households and small collaborators. The core user is someone who manages shared responsibilities with one or more people in their daily life. Think: The household duo โ couples or roommates who split grocery shopping, errands, and home tasks. One person is at the store, the other is at home adding items in real time. This is the highest-value use case and where Listora shines most. The organized family โ parents coordinating with teenagers, tracking chores, meal planning, back-to-school prep. The recurring lists feature is particularly valuable here โ the weekly grocery list resets automatically. The small team or freelancer โ not enterprise, but someone managing a small project, event planning, or running a side business who needs a lightweight shared task system without the complexity of Jira or Asana. Demographically:
Ages 25-45 Mobile-first users (majority access via phone) Comfortable with SaaS subscriptions at the $4-12/month range
What they have in common: They've tried Google Keep or Apple Reminders and hit the wall โ sharing is clunky, there's no real-time sync, and the AI is nonexistent. Listora captures people who have outgrown basic list apps but don't want the complexity of full project management tools. The sweet spot between "notes app" and "Notion." ๐ฏ
Listora.pro's answer:
Listora started with a frustration most couples know too well. Pablo Michelot, a full-stack developer based in Montreal, was tired of the same recurring argument โ someone goes grocery shopping, forgets half the list, and comes home to "I thought you saw my message?" The existing apps weren't solving it. Google Keep doesn't sync fast enough. Apple Reminders locks you into the Apple ecosystem. Todoist is powerful but overkill for "we need milk." WhatsApp lists get buried in conversation. Nothing felt natural for two people managing a shared life together. So he built Listora โ initially just for himself and his household. Real-time sync that actually works, lists that reset automatically on schedule, and an AI that can generate a full ingredient list from "lasagna for 6" in seconds. What started as a personal tool became a product when friends and family started asking to use it. The bilingual EN/FR experience was never an afterthought โ it's baked in from day one, because that's the reality of life in Quebec./ Canada. The philosophy is simple: a list app should disappear into the background of your life. It should just work, instantly, for everyone on it โ whether you're at the store, your partner is at home, or your teenager just remembered they need supplies for tomorrow. Listora is built by one developer who uses it every day. That's the best quality guarantee there is.
Listora.pro's answer:
Listora is built on a modern, lean full-stack JavaScript architecture. - Backend Node.js with Express handles the API โ fast, lightweight, and perfect for real-time applications. Socket.io powers the instant synchronization between devices, so changes appear in under a second for all collaborators. MariaDB is the relational database, running on the same Windows Server infrastructure. - Frontend React with Vite for the UI โ component-based, fast to build, and optimized for mobile. The app is a Progressive Web App (PWA), meaning it's installable on any phone or desktop like a native app, works offline, and gets push-capable without going through the App Store. - AI Claude Sonnet by Anthropic powers the AI assistant โ the same model behind Claude.ai. It generates contextual list suggestions, completes items intelligently, and understands both English and French naturally. - Payments Stripe handles all billing โ subscriptions, webhooks, and the customer portal. PCI-compliant out of the box. - Email Brevo (formerly SendinBlue) for transactional emails โ welcome, password reset, collaboration invites, and activity notifications. - Infrastructure Windows Server 2025 with IIS and iisnode. Cloudflare sits in front for DNS, CDN, and DDoS protection. The stack is intentionally simple โ no microservices, no Kubernetes, no over-engineering. One developer can understand, deploy, and maintain the entire system. That's a feature, not a limitation. ๐ฏ
Listora.pro's answer:
Listora is in its early adopter phase. The current users are individuals, couples, and small households โ exactly the target audience. The product is production-ready, payments work, AI is live, and the infrastructure is solid.
"Listora is used by households and small teams across Canada" "Early users report saving time on weekly grocery planning with recurring lists" "Designed for the way real families and couples actually collaborate"
The opportunity: Being early is actually a selling point for some customers. Early adopters get direct access to the founder, their feedback shapes the product, and they lock in pricing before it scales.
The best thing about not having "big customers" yet is that every customer you get from here is a story worth telling. ๐ฏ
Listora.pro's answer:
The specific things that make it stand out: True real-time sync. Not "refresh to see updates" real-time. WebSocket real-time โ your collaborator's item appears on your screen in under a second, with a typing indicator showing when they're actively adding something. This changes how people actually use a shared list. AI that understands context. The Claude-powered assistant doesn't just autocomplete words โ it understands intent. "Camping trip for 4 people this weekend" generates a full packing list. "Pasta dinner for guests" generates ingredients with quantities. It knows what kind of list you're building and responds accordingly, in English or French. Recurring lists that actually reset. Weekly grocery list, monthly supplies run, daily routine โ set it once and it resets automatically on schedule, removing only the checked items so your standing items stay put. No other consumer list app does this well. Author attribution with color coding. In a shared list, you always know who added what. Every item carries its author's color โ subtle but genuinely useful when two people are building a list together asynchronously. One developer, zero bloat. No enterprise features nobody asked for. No onboarding wizard. No "workspace" setup. You sign up, create a list, share a link, and you're collaborating in under two minutes. That combination โ real-time, AI-native, recurring, bilingual, and genuinely simple โ doesn't exist anywhere else at $4/month. ๐ฏ