A patient voice for the everyday stuff.
Bills. Mail. Medication. Tech trouble. Or just wanting something described. MeMe Care is a voice-first app that looks, listens, and explains — plainly, patiently, and without rushing.
iPhone first. Android on the way — pick your device when you sign up.
What it helps with
A bill shouldn’t feel like a test.
MeMe Care is for the ordinary, important things a patient person used to walk through in person — explained plainly, out loud.
Bills & mail.
From utility statements to Medicare letters. MeMe Care describes what it sees and names the parts that matter.
Medication labels.
Reads the name, dosage, and warnings out loud. Never advises on dosing — always defers to the pharmacist.
Possible scams.
Flags urgency language, impersonation of Medicare, IRS, or banks, and strange phone numbers — before any money moves.
Technology help.
Point the camera at a confusing screen — a Wi-Fi popup, an email, a remote control — and get a walkthrough in plain language.
Describe something.
Hold up anything — a jar, a plant, a photograph on the wall, a piece of mail — and MeMe Care says what it is.
Follow-up questions.
After the explanation, ask anything back. “What’s the due date?” “Is this a scam?” “Should I call my daughter?” MeMe Care stays on the same subject and answers plainly.
How it works
Three steps. No learning curve.
Built for someone who has never installed an app on their own — and doesn’t want to.
- 1
Snap a photo.
Open MeMe Care, point at the document, tap the big button. No lining up. No focus rings. We figure it out.
- 2
Hear it explained.
A warm voice reads it back in plain language, with the important parts first. Captions show too, so they can follow along.
- 3
Ask anything back.
Tap once and talk. Ask what the due date is, whether it’s a scam, or whether they should call you. MeMe Care answers the way a patient person would.
Who it helps
Not just for one person.
I started building MeMe Care for my own parents. Along the way it became clear the same patient voice is needed by a lot of different people — and everyone deserves it spoken their way.
Living independently and wants to keep it that way. Mail, bills, and medication shouldn’t be the thing that tips the balance.
Loves the grandkids and the garden. Everything else — the Wi-Fi password, the Medicare letter — can be a lot.
You’re in it together. MeMe Care can be a patient second set of eyes for both of you, any time of day.
Point, tap, listen. Reads small print, medication labels, and screens out loud without needing magnification or contrast tools.
Dyslexia, cognitive changes, a new language — MeMe Care reads it back plainly and answers questions, without treating anyone like they should already know.
The paperwork doesn’t get lighter. MeMe Care is being built to still be here when it’s your turn — honest, patient, and on your side.
Meets them where they are
One person isn’t every person.
MeMe Care has built-in communication styles you can set once and forget — standard, short-and-simple, easy-read, literal and direct, or slower-paced. The app adapts to the person using it, not the other way around.
For the person you help
They stay independent.
- No passwords. No accounts. They open the app and it works.
- Everything is voice-first. No typing. No tiny buttons.
- Big text. High contrast. Haptic feedback on every tap.
- A warm voice that doesn’t rush them and never makes them feel silly.
For you, together
Peace of mind — theirs and yours.
MeMe Care is for them first. It’s for you because you love them, and knowing they have a patient, honest helper means the calls you do share can be about more than just the mail.
- They get help in the moment — without having to wait for you to pick up.
- You set it up once and handle the billing, so they never see a subscription screen.
- If MeMe Care spots a likely scam, you get a notification so you can check in.
- Their scans stay private. You see the category — never the photo or the words.
Why I built it
A ton of bricks.
When I was younger I remember watching my parents deal with my grandparents on ordinary daily issues. Frustrations were high on both sides — my grandparents felt like they were being a burden, and my parents felt stretched thin trying to help.
As my parents have aged, it hit me like a ton of bricks: I’m in the same position now that they were in with their parents. My parents want to be independent. They don’t want to feel like they’re burdening their children. Although — sometimes I think they call with a problem just to have a conversation.
MeMe Care doesn’t replace that personal family connection. Nothing should. The purpose is to give a little independence back to the people who may need some additional assistance with the ordinary stuff — a confusing bill, a medication label, a letter that looks urgent but isn’t.
About the name. “Meme” is pronounced Mimi. It’s how my mother has spelled it for over thirty years — the name her family calls her. We built this for her, and for every Meme, Papa, Pop-Pop, Nana, and Gigi — and anyone who could use a gentler helper in their pocket.
— Brandon
What we won’t do
Transparency, not fine print.
A few promises. These aren’t marketing — they’re rules built into the product itself.
We will never tell them to act.
No “pay this now.” No “sign here.” No “call them back.” MeMe Care explains — then suggests confirming with someone they trust.
We say “looks like,” not “is.”
The letter in their hands could have been misdelivered. It could be a scam. It could be meant for someone else. We describe what we see. We don’t claim ownership for them.
Photos are processed and deleted.
Every scan runs through a zero-retention AI pipeline. We keep the category and timestamp. We do not keep the picture or the explanation on our servers.
We use the most accurate AI, not the cheapest.
Every single scan runs on Claude Opus, the highest-accuracy model available. It costs us more. Getting it right matters more than a fatter margin.
Questions, honestly answered.
Why is it called MeMe Care? How do you pronounce it?
It’s pronounced "Mimi-Care" (sometimes written MimiCare). "Meme" is how my mother has spelled it for over thirty years — the name her family calls her. We built this for her, and for every Meme, Papa, Pop-Pop, Nana, and Gigi — and for everyone else who could use a gentler helper in their pocket.
How much will MeMe Care cost?
Pricing is still being finalized. The trusted contact pays a small monthly fee; the primary user never sees a payment screen. We’ll share details before launch.
What devices does it work on?
iPhone first, at launch. Android is next — when you join the waitlist, you pick the device so we can tell you the moment your platform is ready.
What about privacy?
Photos stay on the primary user’s device in a cache that iOS and Android don’t include in their automatic backups — so they never land in iCloud or Google Drive. We never upload them anywhere except our zero-data-retention AI pipeline, which drops them as soon as the explanation comes back. They’re never added to a shared scan history either. The scan history itself (category, date, and the words MeMe Care read) also lives on the device in the same no-backup cache. On our servers we keep just the category and timestamp — so the person who set up the account can see that a scan happened, never what it was. We don’t sell anything.
What if the AI gets something wrong?
We use Claude Opus, the highest-accuracy model available, on every scan. MeMe Care never tells the primary user to pay, sign, or act — it describes and suggests asking someone they trust. If anything looks off, we flag it.
Can they use it by themselves?
Yes. That’s the whole point. After the trusted contact sets it up once, they open the app and use it hands-free — voice in, voice out. No passwords. No accounts.
Will it handle scam phone calls and texts too?
Today MeMe Care helps with anything you can photograph — letters, screens, labels. Help for phone calls and texts is on the roadmap.
Who sees their scans?
You see the category and timestamp in your dashboard. You do not see the photo. Scam flags can send you a push notification so you can check in.
When will it be available?
Soon. Join the waitlist and you’ll be among the first to know — we’ll email once, when it’s ready.