Native notifications, global shortcuts, and a system tray that keeps LifeOS one click away. Same powerful web app — now with OS-level superpowers.
Everything you love about LifeOS in the browser, plus native OS integration.
OS-level alerts that work even when the app is minimized
Ctrl+Shift+L to toggle, Ctrl+Shift+N for quick add — from anywhere
Always running in the background, one click to open
Sandboxed renderer, strict navigation lockdown, no telemetry
Loads the latest version from lifeos.vc — no manual updates
No bundled web engine bloat — just a secure native shell
This is normal for new apps that haven't been code-signed yet
When you run the LifeOS-Setup.exe for the first time, Windows Defender SmartScreen may display a warning because the app is new and unsigned. This is completely safe — here's how to proceed:
Double-click the downloaded file
You'll see a blue popup saying "Windows protected your PC"
Click "More info"
This small text link appears below the warning message — it reveals the app name and publisher details
Click "Run anyway"
The button appears after clicking "More info" — LifeOS will start normally. You only need to do this once.
Why does this happen? Microsoft requires developers to purchase a code-signing certificate ($200–$400/year) to remove SmartScreen warnings. Code signing will be added in a future release as LifeOS grows. The app is fully open-source and safe to use.