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I’ve lost count of how many times I’ve created notes and kept putting off opening them because they were so messy. They weren’t formatted, and I couldn’t tell which was a heading and which was copy.
That’s when I decided to give one of those AI note-taking apps a try and see what it could do. I went with Mem, and what it did with my notes was more than I expected.
I wanted to create a note about what dogs can and can’t eat. So I asked Gemini to put something together. When I pasted it into Mem, I ended up with a wall of text. Then I saw a broom icon with sparkles around it, and when I hovered over it, it said, “Clean up notes in a single click.” Mem added things such as headings, bullet points, and a preview of what it added and removed. The app also added a comparison table about which foods were safe and which ones weren’t.

In the preview, I could see the suggested fixes without removing what I had. My notes were in blue, and Mem’s suggestions were in red. If there was a suggestion I didn’t agree with, I could click Refine to adjust the suggested fixes. Even then, it didn’t fix anything until it showed me one more preview with the latest changes. That’s when I could click Accept to make them permanent.
After a long day of typing, my fingers can get cramped. So, when I need to add something to a note, I use the voice recording feature to get all my thoughts out in a single brain-dump. Mem shows me what I’ve added, making it easier to review, since I can see if I missed anything.
Mem treats each phrase as a new line, but the recording doesn’t pause when I stop talking. I can see how much time I’m spending creating the recording, but it won’t stop until I click Done. After that, I can see how Mem asks me to edit my notes with the new information and shows me a preview of what it added and what it’ll remove. If I’m happy with the changes, I can click Done.
I wasn’t too sure if I had added a section on what human foods can be used as treats for dogs. To make sure, without reading the entire note again, I asked Mem’s chat if that section was in my notes. After searching for a few seconds, it told me that I already had a section on that.

The chat showed the name of the section, Safe & Healthy “Human Food” Treats. It showed me the information with:
That made it easier to skim through the information and find the part of the note I wanted. It also included a small note at the end about the 10% rule, which recommends that treats make up no more than that amount of my dog’s daily calories.
I’m not too fond of the 25 notes a month you can create on the free tier. I haven’t reached the limit just yet, but I know I’ll get there eventually. I don’t want another subscription to pay for. I have other apps I can use for free to paste my notes, such as Obsidian and Google Keep. They won’t clean up my notes like Mem, but at least they’re free.
I don’t keep my notes for very long. I’ve only kept them a few weeks. After a while, I ended up clearing my notes and getting the space I needed. I’m not going to worry about the 25 note limit, I’ll erase the ones I don’t need anymore. Mem has already cleaned them up for me, so I can copy them and paste them elsewhere.
I already have my go-to note-taking app, but I wanted to give Mem a try. I wasn’t disappointed by what it could do, but I wasn’t too happy with its limits. I’m still getting things done with the free version, and that’s all that matters at the moment. I already have a plan set up for when I reach the limit, and it doesn’t include paying the monthly subscription.
Mem is an AI-powered notes app that organizes everything you capture and displays it in an easy-to-read format with one click.