The school flyer on the fridge. The screenshot of last night's text thread. The poster from your kid's classroom. Beck AI reads the image, pulls every event out, and lines them up for your tap — before anything lands on your calendar.

The kind of capture that today turns into a screenshot you'll forget about. With Beck AI, it's an event.
A paper flyer comes home in a backpack. Snap it. Beck AI pulls Open House, Spring Concert, and Teacher Conferences as three drafts you can review and confirm.
Pickup is at 4 instead of 3:30 Friday — and again next week. Screenshot the thread. Beck AI reads the change and offers to edit the existing recurring event.
After the planning meeting, you snap the whiteboard. Beck AI pulls every milestone, every owner, and every date — batch review, then they're on your calendar.
The flyer goes home with your kid on Tuesday. By Sunday, half of it has slipped.
Your calendar is as private as your contacts. Nothing is sold, nothing trains AI, and nothing lands on your day until you tap confirm. That's the deal.
Every create, edit, and delete surfaces as a card. You see the draft before it touches your calendar.
Beck AI never trains on your calendar, your chats, or your notes.
Voice input is transcribed right on your phone. Only the current message travels so the AI can answer it — and it isn't retained after. Record a meeting and the audio is deleted the moment its transcript is ready.
Paper flyers, posters, whiteboard photos, screenshots of texts and emails, ticket stubs, and pages from a multi-page scan. If a human can read the dates off it, Beck AI can pull them out.
Yes. Multi-event extraction is the point — a school flyer with Open House, Spring Concert, and Teacher Conferences becomes three drafts in a batch review sheet. Pick which ones to keep before anything is written.
Apple's Visual Intelligence catches one event at a time and dumps you into a blank form to fix dates and times yourself. Beck AI pulls every event from the image, checks each one against your day, edits existing recurring events when something changes, and lets you keep talking — 'move the school concert to Saturday, same time.'
The image is processed so the AI can read it, then dropped. Nothing is retained, nothing is stored beyond your phone, and nothing is ever used to train AI.
Yes. Beck AI reads handwriting the same way it reads the rest of the image — like a person would. Cleaner handwriting reads cleaner, but a slanted whiteboard photo with five action items will still parse.
Nothing changes on your calendar until you tap confirm. Every event is a draft card. Tap edit to fix the date, time, calendar, or attendees before it's written.
The next reschedule, school flyer, or “can we do Thursday?” takes one sentence.