A shorter indoor mobility session, late morning — then something warm and slow to eat.
The real app reads these five live and writes one suggestion. Here they’re fixed samples — tap “trace” to watch them converge.
That card is the whole idea. The app doesn’t look one thing up — it fuses several things it already knows into a single answer you can act on. Every surface in here works this way. Below is the room it lives in.
The room reads the day
Two inputs the app takes from time alone — no data about you required. These two are live right now.
The Night Room is one person’s private companion app — a quiet, monastic space for keeping the day: goals and habits, the body and its care, the people they love, the world they manage, language and lineage, and the inner life.
The real room is full of that person’s private records, so it can’t be shown to anyone. This is a stripped demo. The structure, the navigation, and the design are exactly the real app — but every block has had its contents lifted out and replaced with a plain-language note about what it does and how it decides.
The eight foundations
The room is organized into eight rooms of its own. This is the whole map.
begin with Today
And how it holds the line
Synthesis is the easy half. The harder half is restraint — knowing what not to do. Three ways this app makes that legible:
Every foundation names one thing it deliberately will not do. The room doesn’t diagnose, doesn’t score the person, doesn’t nudge for engagement. Naming the refusal is the point — most tools only show what they can do.
There’s a Governance view toggle pinned to the corner of every page. Turn it on and each surface reveals the control that governs its changes — read-only vs. undoable-write, who can edit, what’s locked. Try it now.
Some things the app refuses to decide. When a choice is the person’s to make — a real judgment call, money, a relationship — it stages the options and waits, rather than choosing for them. That waiting state is a first-class surface, not an error.
a sample handoff — waiting on a personAbout this demo
Built as a hand-shell: it borrows the real app’s palette, type, and layout, but loads none of its data files, makes no network calls, and requires no sign-in. Even the weather-reactive sky above is a local sample loop, not a live forecast. What you’re seeing renders entirely from these demo pages plus the shared design system.