Why this exists
I started Stu.Do during my sophomore year at Hofstra. I was juggling a to-do app, a calendar app, a separate site for the schedule, a separate chat for every group project, and a spreadsheet for my GPA. None of them talked to each other. All of them needed a sign-in. The friction of staying on top of school was higher than the schoolwork itself.
Stu.Do is what I built instead — one app that does all of it. It's offline-first, it understands what a syllabus actually is, and it does the GPA math for you. That's the whole pitch.
No AI chatbot
Every productivity app right now is racing to ram a chatbot into the sidebar. Stu.Do doesn't have one. There's no floating “ask AI” button, no agent trying to summarize your notes, no model nudging you to upgrade for smarter features.
The one place AI shows up is the syllabus import — paste a PDF, get a list of assignments back to confirm. That's the entire AI surface. It does a thing that's actually annoying to do by hand, and then it gets out of the way.
Who built it
I'm Josue Mendives. I study Computer Science and Cybersecurity at Hofstra University (Class of 2027). I'm an IT3 in the U.S. Coast Guard Selected Reserves. I run Mend Labs, a software studio I started in 2026 to build products for modern teams — Stu.Do is our first consumer app.
Builder first, student second. I ship real products, then I do my homework.
What's next
Stu.Do is on iPhone today. Android and a desktop companion are in development. More features land regularly — if you have a request or you've found something broken, I want to know. The fastest way is the support form.
Get in touch
Mend Labs · Software development for modern products
