Private iPhone apps · Offline-first · Built small

Tools for the awkward human moments software usually misunderstands.

A portfolio of small iPhone apps for field work, sensitive meetings, time anxiety, decisions, personal reflection, and the private things that should not become cloud content.

01 · Portfolio

Each app has one job. That is the point.

Replace generic productivity theatre with narrower tools that do the useful thing and then get out of the way.

02 · Operating belief

Good software should sometimes ask for less.

Less login. Less cloud dependency. Less ceremony. Less pretending the user is at a desk with perfect attention and perfect Wi‑Fi.

No account by default If a tool does not need identity, it should not demand identity.
Local-first thinking Private notes, records and reflections should stay close to the person who made them.
One awkward job Every app begins with a specific irritation, not a feature backlog.
Human context Field work, anxiety, memory, delay, doubt and reflection are design constraints.
Small surfaces The best interface is often the one that disappears once the decision is made.
Practical privacy Privacy is not a slogan. It is an architectural choice.
Clear rituals Small repeated actions beat bloated systems people abandon.
Designed restraint Not every problem improves when you add a dashboard.
Not another productivity suite. A set of small exits from bad defaults.

Built for moments when mainstream software is overbuilt, intrusive, or aimed at the wrong user.

The app should feel obvious only after the behaviour has been reframed.

Quote before you leave. Record before you forget. Decide before you reopen. Tell less time when exact time becomes noise.