We built Tarikh because the diary apps we tried in our own chambers spoke the wrong language - literally and figuratively.
Tarikh is built by lawyers and engineers in Dhaka. Our seniors were managing case diaries the way most BD chambers still do: a thick notebook in court, a stack of WhatsApp groups for client updates, and an Excel file someone had to update every evening.
We tried the foreign diary apps. Dates were in the wrong timezone. Bangla was an afterthought. The shape of a chamber - Senior, Junior, Munshi - was nowhere to be found. So we wrote our own.
It is the default. Dates, weekdays, calendar headers, form labels - all native.
If a feature does not save chamber time today, it does not ship.
Most lawyers will open Tarikh from a court corridor, not a desk.
Cases export to CSV. Each case exports as a branded PDF with hearings, notes and attachments.
Tarikh is shaped by what real chambers ask for. We read every message.