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DaylogueDaylogue
vs
StoicStoic

Daylogue vs Stoic

Stoic brings ancient wisdom to modern journaling with philosophy-based morning and evening rituals. It's focused and opinionated.

Stoic

Stoic is best for

Users who want a philosophy-based journaling practice with structured morning and evening rituals rooted in Stoic wisdom.

Daylogue

Daylogue is best for

Users who want flexible, conversational AI with end-to-end encryption, without needing to follow a specific philosophical framework.

Feature comparison

Side-by-side breakdown of what matters most

Feature
DaylogueDaylogue
StoicStoic
End-to-end encryption
Yes - zero-knowledge for stored content
No - standard cloud encryption
User holds encryption keys
Yes - keys never leave your device
No - provider-managed keys
On-device AI processing
No - cloud AI with transient processing
Yes - Foundation Model AI runs on-device (iOS)
AI journaling features
Yes - conversational with follow-ups, themes
Yes - personalized reflections, adaptive prompts
Stoic philosophy integration
No - philosophy-agnostic approach
Yes - built around Stoic principles
Meditation & breathing
No - journaling focused
Yes - guided and unguided sessions
Voice journaling
Yes - multi-language voice input
No
Offline support
Yes - full offline functionality
Yes - good offline support
Platform support
iOS, Web
iOS, iPad, macOS, Apple Watch, Web, Android
Data export
Yes - full export available
Yes - export available
Free tier available
Yes
Yes - with premium features
Stoic

Where Stoic excels

To be fair, Stoic does some things really well.

On-device AI: Foundation Model AI processes reflections entirely on your device, so nothing leaves your phone
Stoic philosophy: Built around principles from Marcus Aurelius, Seneca, and Epictetus
Meditation & breathing: Science-backed exercises for relaxation, focus, sleep, and calm
Apple ecosystem: Native apps for iPhone, iPad, Mac, Apple Watch, and web
Personalized prompts: AI analyzes your entries to generate prompts tailored to your themes and struggles
Daylogue

Where Daylogue is stronger

For users who want both AI depth and true encryption.

End-to-end encryption at rest

Your stored journal content is encrypted with keys you control. Stoic stores data with standard cloud encryption, meaning their team could technically access it.

Philosophy-neutral approach

Stoic assumes you want Stoic philosophy. Daylogue lets your own insights emerge without imposing a framework. Your reflection, your conclusions.

Voice journaling

Daylogue supports multi-language voice input. Stoic focuses on text-based reflection.

Deeper conversational AI

While Stoic offers personalized prompts, Daylogue engages in back-and-forth conversation, asking follow-ups and building context across many entries.

Cross-platform future

Stoic is Apple-focused. Daylogue is building for iOS, Android, and Web to meet you wherever you are.

Common questions

What is Stoic's Foundation Model AI?

Stoic introduced Foundation Model AI features that run entirely on-device. This means your reflections are processed locally without leaving your iPhone or iPad. It's a meaningful privacy feature for AI processing, though stored data still uses standard cloud encryption.

Is Stoic good for beginners?

Yes, especially if you're interested in Stoic philosophy. The app combines journaling with meditation, breathing exercises, and daily quotes from ancient philosophers. If you want a more neutral, philosophy-free approach to reflection, Daylogue might be a better fit.

Which is more private?

For AI processing, Stoic's on-device approach is more private since nothing leaves your phone. For stored data, Daylogue's end-to-end encryption is stronger since we can't access your content even if we wanted to. Different approaches to privacy, both valid.

Does Stoic have meditation features?

Yes. Stoic includes guided and unguided meditation sessions, science-backed breathing exercises, and therapy notes for tracking mental health progress. Daylogue focuses purely on journaling and reflection, without meditation features.

Can I use Stoic on Android?

Stoic has an Android app, though it's primarily optimized for the Apple ecosystem. Daylogue is building native apps for both iOS and Android with feature parity.

Try Daylogue

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Your journal entries are end-to-end encrypted. We can't read them. We don't want to.