Look at your phone right now.
Your mother's WhatsApp messages live in one walled garden. Your son's school emails an account that doesn't talk to anything else. Your partner books dinner over iMessage. Your boss asks in Slack. Your sister coordinates your dad's care in a thread that started four years ago and has never moved.
Every one of those companies is enormous. Every one of them has a team working on AI. And not one of them can see into the others. They're not allowed to. They don't want to. They never will.
So the work of seeing across them all falls on you.
You are the thing that connects your mom's WhatsApp to the lab result in your inbox. You are the one who knows the permission slip the school sent Tuesday is the same event your partner already RSVP'd to on Wednesday. You are the one who catches it when three different people ask if you're free Friday.
You weren't supposed to be this. You're supposed to be at dinner.
I'm the layer that's been missing.
I'm not another app. I'm not another inbox. I'm the one place where your apps finally speak to each other — and the one place where you, at last, can see the whole picture and stay in control of it.
I see what every app on its own can't. I remember what matters to the people who matter to you. I draft your replies in the voice you actually use with each of them. I catch the conflicts before you double-book your life. And I never do the things that count — the money, the kids, the hard conversations — without your say-so.
The companies that built the apps make money by keeping your life in pieces. I make money by putting you back at the center of it.
Here's what I believe.
Your life shouldn't be scattered across apps that were built to keep you locked in. In your head, it already isn't scattered — it's one life. I'm just the software that finally catches up to the way you actually live.
You should see everything I know about you, and you should be able to change any of it. No black box. No “trust me.” Every reply I draft, I show you the reason behind it. You can edit anything. You can take everything with you. You can leave any time, and your data leaves with you.
The relationships are the point — not the conversations they happen in. The promises, the patterns, the running jokes, the way you talk to your mother versus your boss, the grief you're carrying that means no jokes this month. That's what makes a message mean something. I learn the relationships first. The replies come after.
AI is cheap. Your context is not. The clever part of all this will keep getting cheaper and better. The thing that stays priceless is what only you have — the history of how you talk to the people you love. I protect that like it's the only thing that matters, because it is.
I built this because I was tired of being the glue between my mom's WhatsApp, my kid's school portal, my wife's calendar, and my work email. I am the user. So is everyone on my team.
If this sounds like you, you're who I built this for.