For People with ADHD
Traditional file organization demands exactly what ADHD makes hardest — consistent categorization, manual sorting, and remembering where you put things. The Drive AI removes all of that. Files organize themselves.
The reality
You are not lazy. You are not disorganized. Your brain just works differently — and every file management tool was built for a brain that does not context-switch, hyperfocus, or lose track of the folder it was just looking at.
You saved the file. You know you saved it. But the Downloads folder has 2,000 items and you cannot remember what you named it — or if you named it at all. You open Finder, type three different search terms, give up, and ask for it to be resent.
You create the perfect folder structure on Monday. By Thursday you are saving files to the Desktop again because the system requires too many decisions. The cognitive load of "where does this go?" is enough to break any routine.
Someone emailed you a contract. Or was it a PDF? Two weeks ago? You scroll through 200 emails trying to find it. Even when you do, you forget to save it somewhere useful — because saving it requires choosing a folder, and that means making a decision.
You were working on a document five minutes ago. You switched tabs to check something. Now you cannot find the document. It is open somewhere in your 47 browser tabs, or maybe you closed it, or maybe it was a Google Doc — you are not sure anymore.
You know "Screenshot 2026-07-01 at 3.45.12 PM.png" is a bad filename. But renaming it means deciding on a naming convention, which means deciding on a system, which means executive function you do not have right now.
Your Drive has 500 files in the root folder. Your Desktop is full. You know it is a problem. But the idea of going through all of it feels so overwhelming that you avoid it entirely — and the pile keeps growing.
How it works
What if the file system just... handled itself? No decisions. No "where does this go?" No naming. No sorting. No willpower required. You save a file — or it arrives from email — and it ends up in the right place, with the right name, every single time.
Write one prompt describing how you want files organized. The AI handles every file after that — no manual sorting, no folder choices, no executive function tax. Files go where they belong automatically.
Connect Gmail or Outlook once. Every attachment is automatically saved, renamed by content, and filed into the right folder. You never have to manually save or sort an attachment again.
Forgot what you named it? Search by what the file is about. "The invoice from the plumber in March" finds it — even if the file is named scan_003.pdf. Your memory does not have to be perfect.
Every file gets a consistent, descriptive name based on what it contains. No decisions, no naming conventions to remember. A photo of a receipt becomes "2026-03-15-HomeDepot-receipt.jpg" automatically.
This is not a system you have to maintain. There is no weekly review, no inbox to process, no habits to build. The organization happens in the background whether you think about it or not.
Files from email, Slack, Teams, and uploads all flow into one organized workspace. No more "was it in Gmail or Google Drive or Slack?" — everything is in one searchable place.
In practice
You say
"Organize my files by type and date. Invoices go in Finance/Invoices/[year]. Contracts go in Legal/[client name]. Everything else goes in General/[month]."
It does
Every file that arrives — from email, from uploads, from Slack — is read, classified, and placed in the correct folder. No manual sorting. The prompt runs forever.
You say
"Find the tax document my accountant sent last month"
It does
Searches by content, not filename. Finds "2025-W2-Johnson.pdf" even though your accountant named it "doc_final_v2.pdf" — because the AI read the contents.
You say
"Rename all my screenshots to describe what they show"
It does
Reads the visual content of each screenshot and renames them: "screenshot-slack-conversation-about-project-deadline.png", "screenshot-figma-homepage-design-v3.png".
“I have ADHD and I have tried every file system. They all fall apart within a week because they require me to make decisions constantly. This is the first tool where I literally do nothing and my files are organized. It is life-changing.”
Jamie R. — Freelance designer, diagnosed ADHD-PI
FAQ
No. You write one plain-English prompt describing how you want things organized — like talking to an assistant. "Put invoices in Finance, contracts in Legal, and everything else in a General folder by month." That is the entire setup. The AI interprets your intent and handles the rest.
That is the whole point — you cannot forget, because you do not have to do anything. Files from email are captured automatically. Files you upload are organized automatically. There is nothing to remember or maintain.
Yes. You can point the AI at your existing file dump — your Downloads folder, your Desktop, your root Drive — and it will read every file, classify it, rename it, and sort it into folders. It handles the backlog and then keeps organizing going forward.
Update your prompt. The AI will reorganize existing files to match your new structure. No need to manually move hundreds of files — just tell it the new system and it handles the migration.
Yes, fundamentally. Google Drive with Gemini helps you search and summarize files — but it does not organize, rename, or sort them. Your files stay wherever you put them. The Drive AI actively moves, renames, and categorizes files based on their content. It is the difference between a better search bar and an actual filing assistant.
Free tier includes 5 GB of storage with full auto-organization. No credit card required. Paid plans start at $8/month for more storage and additional integrations.
One prompt. Zero maintenance. Your files find their own home — so you never have to.
5 GB free · No credit card · Cancel anytime