Support
Your private newspaper
The Daily Me is your private newspaper. You do not write diary entries — you file stories into a paper that is entirely your own, and read them back on a front page typeset like a real broadsheet. Here's how to get the most from it.
Getting started
Name your paper and set a byline, then file your first story. Write a headline and a story — the conversation you had, the one you avoided, the day that mattered — and The Daily Me lays it out with a masthead, a lead story, columns and a red FILED stamp. Pull down on the front page to reprint it.
Five sections, one paper
File into Op-Ed for opinions and things you have finally decided; Letter for messages to someone specific, sent or unsent; Editorial for reflective judgement and where you stand now; Obituary for endings — habits, relationships, versions of yourself; and Breaking for something that just happened.
The press run and editor ranks
The press counts the days you have filed as a quiet streak under the masthead, with no shaming when it breaks. Keep filing and your byline climbs from Stringer to Editor-in-Chief, each promotion appearing on your front page as the paper grows up around you.
Prompts, editions and accessibility
When you do not know where to start, draw from a deck of editorial prompts grouped into themed packs, and save the ones that land. Switch between a warm Day edition and a deep-charcoal Night edition by hand or by following the system. A full accessibility section re-renders the whole paper the instant you change it — larger text, bold text, reduce motion and higher contrast.
Common questions
Do I need an account? No. The Daily Me has no account and no login, and everything stays on your device.
Is my writing private? Yes. On Android the app has no internet permission at all, so your stories cannot be transmitted anywhere. See our Privacy Policy.
Will my stories sync to another device? Not in this version. Cloud sync is intentionally not part of the Android edition — your paper lives on the one device you write it on.
What happens if I reinstall the app? Deleting the app removes its local file, so back up anything you want to keep first. There is no server-side copy to restore from.
Contact
We read every message. Reach us at vuyo@quantyx.co.za.
The Daily Me is published by Quantyx, a South African AI development house. Privacy · quantyx.co.za