Hi everyone – I’m the creator of Smart Silence. Thank you for all the thoughtful feedback and questions — I really appreciate it. I wanted to respond to some of the points raised and share a bit about where the app is headed.
⸻
“Doesn’t iOS already support this?”
You’re right — iOS offers Focus Modes with location-based triggers and automation via Shortcuts. But in practice, these are underused because they’re not easy to configure or manage. Smart Silence builds on that by making the process simpler, more flexible, and community-oriented.
Here’s how it’s different:
• Quick Silent Zone setup: Add any location (house of worship, library, classroom, etc.) and the app handles the rest — no need to mess with Focus Mode automations.
• Silent Zone Sharing: You can share a Silent Zone with others, so groups (like schools or religious organizations) can all use the same settings.
• Smart Reminders: It sends a prompt (or runs a Shortcut) when you enter/leave a Silent Zone — keeping you in control, while avoiding disruption.
• Easy Reversion: When you leave a Silent Zone, it reminds you to turn sound back on, avoiding the classic “why am I missing calls?” issue.
⸻
New: Scheduled Silent Sessions
In addition to location-based detection, Smart Silence also supports scheduled quiet times in those locations.
You can set silent hours for things like:
• Classes
• Meetings
• Services
• Daily focus blocks (like 9–11 AM “deep work”)
This is especially helpful if you work or study in one place, but need silence at specific times.
⸻
Coming Soon: Focus Points System
One of the most exciting features I’m working on is Focus Points:
• While Do Not Disturb is active in a Silent Zone, Smart Silence uses motion data to see if your phone stays still.
• If you don’t pick it up or use it, you earn Focus Points.
• These points contribute to daily or weekly focus scores, with streak tracking and possible rewards later on.
It’s a lightweight way to encourage discipline and reduce unnecessary phone use during important moments.
⸻
Not Just for Houses of Worship
The original inspiration came from watching someone’s phone go off during a quiet moment in a house of worship. They were clearly embarrassed, and it disrupted everyone else too. But this app isn’t just for religious settings — it works anywhere silence and focus are important:
• Libraries
• Classrooms
• Meetings
• Meditation groups
• Study blocks
• Movie theaters
⸻
*“Do people still need this?”*
Yes — many people still forget to silence their phones or get distracted by notifications. Smart Silence is about reducing friction and making it easy to be present, whether out of respect for others or to improve your own focus.
⸻
Thanks again for all the feedback. I’m continuing to improve the app and would love more input. Let me know what you’d want it to do — or if you think something could be done better.
Thanks for clarifying. I can see what you’re going for and why the iOS functionality isn’t enough. Some feedback that comes to my mind:
I imagine that there are three personas -
1. one who wants others’ phones to be silent
2. one who wants to silence their own phone
3. one who is indifferent
Type 1 is motivated to download the app and encourage others to do so, especially if they are in the administration of that place.
Type 2 might choose to manually silence their phone. There is a subset of type 2 that might constantly forget to silence their device. This subset might be motivated to download the app.
Type 3 is simply not motivated to download the app.
I’d suggest checking if this is really a need that people feel and will be motivated to download an app for, or a projection of one’s own preference of order and discipline that one wishes others to have.
I have heard all of your comments and issues regarding requiring a phone number for signup and some email addresses being recognized as invalid. I am working on this with my developers.
I am going to make the phone number field optional. Until that time you can enter all 0s if you don't want to put in your phone number. The reason for the phone number entry is to allow for purely informational SMS notifications. No actual message content is sent with the notifications, just that you got a new message or contact request. In the future I am planning a sandboxed app that would handle notifications.
I am also going to resolve the email address error. I will work on ensuring that all email addresses can join.
This is very valuable feedback and I appreciate it very much. If you have further feedback please don't hesitate to post. I take all of the comments seriously and want to get all issues resolved.
What do you mean by "standard format" exactly? My email address is in the format username@domainname.tld and I have sent messages from and received messages to that email address for at least a decade.
Seems really redundant/invasive for a secure communication system! How about at least making it optional??!! What if I do not trust my phone to handle such notifications? So many points I can come up with why this is a bad idea.
Eboard Secure Mail is a web based private messaging platform that is a more secure communication solution than current email systems. This is a change in the long standing paradigm of the current plethora of email solutions. To be clear this is not email. This is a system that gives you a familiar web-mail like interface but builds into it the ability to only send and receive messages from approved contacts. Along with it’s secure push notification system for new messaging events, it provides a safe and secure solution to the chaotic, expensive and insecure email environment that individuals and businesses operate in today.
⸻
“Doesn’t iOS already support this?”
You’re right — iOS offers Focus Modes with location-based triggers and automation via Shortcuts. But in practice, these are underused because they’re not easy to configure or manage. Smart Silence builds on that by making the process simpler, more flexible, and community-oriented.
Here’s how it’s different: • Quick Silent Zone setup: Add any location (house of worship, library, classroom, etc.) and the app handles the rest — no need to mess with Focus Mode automations. • Silent Zone Sharing: You can share a Silent Zone with others, so groups (like schools or religious organizations) can all use the same settings. • Smart Reminders: It sends a prompt (or runs a Shortcut) when you enter/leave a Silent Zone — keeping you in control, while avoiding disruption. • Easy Reversion: When you leave a Silent Zone, it reminds you to turn sound back on, avoiding the classic “why am I missing calls?” issue.
⸻
New: Scheduled Silent Sessions
In addition to location-based detection, Smart Silence also supports scheduled quiet times in those locations.
You can set silent hours for things like: • Classes • Meetings • Services • Daily focus blocks (like 9–11 AM “deep work”)
This is especially helpful if you work or study in one place, but need silence at specific times.
⸻
Coming Soon: Focus Points System
One of the most exciting features I’m working on is Focus Points: • While Do Not Disturb is active in a Silent Zone, Smart Silence uses motion data to see if your phone stays still. • If you don’t pick it up or use it, you earn Focus Points. • These points contribute to daily or weekly focus scores, with streak tracking and possible rewards later on.
It’s a lightweight way to encourage discipline and reduce unnecessary phone use during important moments.
⸻
Not Just for Houses of Worship
The original inspiration came from watching someone’s phone go off during a quiet moment in a house of worship. They were clearly embarrassed, and it disrupted everyone else too. But this app isn’t just for religious settings — it works anywhere silence and focus are important: • Libraries • Classrooms • Meetings • Meditation groups • Study blocks • Movie theaters
⸻
*“Do people still need this?”*
Yes — many people still forget to silence their phones or get distracted by notifications. Smart Silence is about reducing friction and making it easy to be present, whether out of respect for others or to improve your own focus.
⸻
Thanks again for all the feedback. I’m continuing to improve the app and would love more input. Let me know what you’d want it to do — or if you think something could be done better.
– Gabe