What we're building

Accessibility-first apps for real life.

Most software treats accessibility as a box to check at the end. We build the other way around: every app here starts screen-reader-first, keyboard-first, and privacy-respecting, and clears WCAG 2.2 AA as a floor — not a finish line.

  • Chronic illness & symptom tracking

    iOS beta (TestFlight)

    Baseline

    A private place to track symptoms, medications, energy, and sleep — designed for the days when you have the least energy to spare. Plain-language patterns in your own data, never a diagnosis, and your health information stays yours.

    For: People managing chronic illness, and the clinicians they choose to share with.

  • Community & peer support

    Live · beta

    KindredAccess

    Real-time peer support for disabled people and caregivers, built screen-reader-first — typing, presence, and delivery status are all announced clearly, never conveyed by color or motion alone, so the conversation is genuinely usable.

    For: Disabled people, caregivers, and the communities that support them.

  • Veterans' benefits, in plain language

    Early access

    VA Benefits Navigator

    An assistant that helps veterans understand and navigate VA benefits and claims — answering questions in plain language, citing its sources, and never guessing when it should say "check with a rep."

    For: Veterans, and the Veteran Service Officers who help them.

  • A directory of what's actually accessible

    Open beta

    Access Atlas

    Find and share the real accessibility of places — step-free entrances, accessible restrooms, sensory details — backed by photos from the community. Built with zero client-side JavaScript, so it works on any device and any connection.

    For: Anyone who needs to know a place works for them before they go.

  • Fix broken accessibility on any site

    Beta · store submission in progress

    Page Repair

    A browser extension that names the unlabeled buttons and controls screen readers get stuck on — turning "button, button, button" into something you can actually use, even on pages the owner never fixed.

    For: Screen-reader users, and the testers who advocate for them.

  • Is your content really reachable?

    Experimental · open

    a11y-probe

    An open tool (on Reddit's Devvit platform) that checks whether interactive content can actually be reached and operated with a screen reader — a quick, honest probe of real accessibility, not an automated score.

    For: Developers and accessibility testers.

One accessible foundation, not six afterthoughts

These apps span health, community, benefits, wayfinding, and the web itself — but they share one foundation: a common accessibility standard, a shared design system, and a single privacy-respecting identity layer.

That's the point. Accessibility isn't reinvented (or forgotten) app by app — it's built in once, at the platform level, so every product inherits the same bar. The same care that makes a tool usable with a screen reader tends to make it clearer, calmer, and better for everyone.

Want early access, or building something similar?

Most of these are in beta. If one fits a need you have — or you want help building software to this bar — get in touch.