We let an AI learn taste from behavior, not prompts — curious if this is useful or stupid
Hey PH 👋
I’m launching TasteOS this week, and I want to pressure-test the idea, not hype the product.
Most AI food apps work like this:
prompt → generate recipe → forget everything
TasteOS flips that.
Instead of asking you what you want, it quietly learns from:
meals you actually cook or eat
ingredients you use repeatedly
patterns over time (not macros, not trends)
Over time, it builds a personal taste fingerprint and uses that to suggest meals.
No “Italian healthy comfort food under 30 minutes” prompts.
No pretending taste is universal.
What I’m genuinely curious about:
Does learning from behavior instead of prompts feel like the right abstraction?
Would you trust an AI to pick dinner after it’s watched you for a bit?
Where does this cross from “helpful” → “creepy” for you?
Does this solve a real problem, or just create a clever demo?
Not looking for growth hacks or launch advice here — just honest reactions from people who build products and think about UX, trust, and AI memory.
If you try it and hate it, that’s still useful.
Launching Wednesday 🚀
App is live now if you want to poke holes in it.
— Brady


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