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Release 1 of Plan Perfect: open sign-up and more practical planning

By R. B. Atai5 min read

Plan Perfect has reached Release 1.

This is not the kind of release that is only about a new version number. Over the past week, the product became noticeably stronger in the places where people expect a calendar to help in everyday life: finding an event quickly, jumping back into a schedule from Telegram, avoiding repetitive setup, and interacting with smarter features in a clearer way.

An important part of this release is that we opened sign-up and made Plan Perfect available to everyone who wants to try it. Release 1 is not just the next internal step for the product. It is also a clear entry point for new users who want to arrive, create an account, and test the service in the real rhythm of their week.

In short, Release 1 makes Plan Perfect feel much more practical as a system you can comfortably use between the web and Telegram, not just something to demo as an idea.


Telegram became more useful as a daily tool

Telegram has been an important part of Plan Perfect for a while, and in Release 1 it moved closer to what a real day-to-day tool should feel like.

The bot now supports event search by title and description. That matters not because there is one more button in the menu, but because a calendar only starts to feel truly alive when you can find the entry you need quickly instead of scrolling through lists by hand.

There is also calendar export to PDF with a choice of period: day, week, or month. That makes the product more useful in situations where a schedule is not just something you keep for yourself, but something you may want to export, share, or view in a fixed format.

The bot itself also became easier to use in everyday settings. It is now more comfortable to change the time zone, manage notifications, and choose a default reminder. For a calendar product, that is not a minor detail. It is part of the basic trust users need before they can rely on the service every day.


The calendar adapts better to real routines

One of the strongest parts of this release is that it improves not only individual features, but the system's default behavior.

The web interface now includes default event duration settings. That means new events without an explicitly set end time can be created faster and with less manual adjustment. For people who work with repeated meeting formats, regular time slots, or focus blocks, that kind of detail saves more time than it may seem at first glance.

The reminder flow also became stronger. From a user point of view, that means something simple: Plan Perfect is moving toward a more reliable scenario where a calendar does not only store an event, but also brings it back to your attention at the right moment. In this release, both the reminder-related settings and the link between events and follow-up reminders became more visible.


Smarter flows became closer to real calendar help

In earlier versions, natural language already helped users add events faster. In Release 1, that layer became noticeably more useful.

The AI flow now works better not only in the "add an event" mode, but also in the "show me what I have planned" mode. In practice, the product moved closer to a more natural dialogue with your calendar: you can not only add plans in plain language, but also ask about events for today, tomorrow, a week, a month, or another period.

At the same time, the handling of unclear or failed assistant responses also improved. That may not be the loudest headline feature, but it matters for trust: when a smart feature does not succeed, users should get a clear next step, not a broken black box.


Who this release fits especially well

Release 1 looks especially relevant for people who:

  • keep personal and work plans in one system
  • want to use the web as the main control center and Telegram as the quick entry point
  • often return to existing events and do not want to waste time on manual search
  • live in routines where time zones, reminders, and recurring calendar habits matter
  • have been waiting for the moment when the product could be openly tried through sign-up, not just read about in announcements
  • want a working foundation they can try on a real week now, instead of waiting for a "smart calendar someday"

That is what feels most important about Plan Perfect right now: it is becoming not just a collection of calendar features, but a more coherent system for everyday planning.


For us, Release 1 means something simple: Plan Perfect can now be opened to people outside the project in a normal way, not only developed internally.

If you have been watching the product for a while, this is a good moment to try it in the rhythm of your real week: with the web as the control center, Telegram as the fast way back in, and planning flows that keep moving closer to real life instead of formal calendar maintenance.