Examples

NeuroMobile helps you manage and organize your life by putting important information at your fingertips. Use it to remember anything! Here are just a few examples.


Q. What's the password for my office laptop?

Q. What’s the phone number for the Chase credit card rewards program?

Q. Where did I park my car at the airport?

Q. What groceries do I need from Safeway?



TIP: Recall entire list based on search terms.

A.



Q. What’s the account number for my cable bill?

Q. What’s Tiara’s history teacher’s name?

Q. What home repair projects are on my todo list?

Q. What’s the hotel confirmation number for my trip to Hawaii?



TIP: Separate clues with spaces e.g. NewYork not New York.


A.



Q. What’s the name of that book I want to read?

Q. What’s the name of the restaurant I went to in New York with Daryl?

Q. What’s the pronunciation of my calculus professor’s name?



TIP: Tap on a clue on the Memory Details or Clues screen to jump to related memories containing that clue.


A.



Q. When is my cousin’s birthday?

Q. Q. What’s the name of the movie Lee recommended?

Q. What are the action items for that project meeting with Lamar?



TIP: Enter memories without clues and recall memory based on text in memory and notes field.


A.



Q. What the web address for NeuroMobile?

Q. What’s the support email address for NeuroMobile?



TIP: Tap on a clue or memory to launch a web, email or phone session.


A.

. . .

Most Frequently Used Clues
You may want to use some of these most frequently used clues to help organize your thoughts. #(number), account, article, bar, birthday, blog, book, confirm (confirmation), dad, date, email, food, grocery, idea, ipod, list, mag (magazine), management, manager, meeting, mom, movie, name, number, password (pw), phone, pronounce, radioad, recom (recommended), restaurant, site, stock, task, tickets, time, tobuy, todo, toread, torent, tvad, tvshow, vocab (vocabulary), web.

How Many Clues Should I Use
On average 1-3 clues are associated with most memories. However in some cases you may decide not to use any clues. For example you may add a memory for where you parked at the airport without a clue. You can recall this memory by searching the memory or notes field or scrolling through your most recent memories. In other cases you may enter a single clue. For example to remember the groceries you need from your local store you would add say the memory: Milk and the single clue: Safeway. Generally more clues are associated with memories that you expect to be longer lasting.

Managing Lists
There are two popular methods to manage lists. You can enter each entry in the list as a separate memory on different days and times as is in the case for a grocery list. Recall the list based on a common clue. Another means is to add a memory describing the list and update the notes field with the individual list entries.

Quick Notes
Use the memory field and clues to describe meeting topic and use the notes field to record the action items and notes from the meeting. When scrolling through and exploring your memories, edit the meeting notes and other memories to add additional clarity.

Stop!
Before you scratch-out another note on that notepad next to your computer or try to rely on your natural memory only to forget some important information, store it in NeuroMobile for quick and easy recall, even years later.



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