Juno
Juno targets people living with chronic conditions who need more than a symptom diary: it aims to turn ongoing health logs into patterns and prep users for clinical conversations. The positioning is clear enough — there is a real, underserved audience here who gets lost between appointments and wants a tool that actually remembers their history and helps them articulate it. What is harder to assess from the outside is whether the AI reasoning layer adds genuine clinical utility or mostly repackages what a well-structured spreadsheet would show. The category has seen multiple launches with similar pitches, and the ones that stick tend to do so because of integration with real health records or care-team workflows — not just because the chat interface is pleasant. No pricing detail available at a glance. Worth watching if you are building adjacent to digital health, less worth a Saturday if you are not in that space. -> Best for: indie hacker or solo founder building in the digital health or patient-advocacy vertical