Why device-native products matter
Some problems need to live on the person's own device. Navigation, routing, support, and context-aware tools can be far more useful when they travel with the user instead of waiting inside a website.
More than one app
The plan is for a connected set of apps and tools that can run independently or in conjunction with each other. Privacy-first principles, community value, and real day-to-day usefulness sit at the center of that approach.
- Outdoor and day-to-day navigation tools
- Indoor navigation for hospitals and public buildings
- Transit and route planning support
- Toilet finders and accommodation mapping
- Venue and service discovery for accessible or disability-confident places
Platform reach
The vision is not locked to one ecosystem. Future products should be planned for iOS, Android, Windows, macOS, and Linux where that makes sense, with a strong bias toward privacy, device control, and interoperability.
That does not mean every platform is equally open today. Current iOS limitations already show why adaptive access cannot be left at the mercy of uneven vendor rules.
