Idea 19 · Kin, a working name
A family space made easy enough for the person the other apps left behind, and worth visiting for the ones who drifted away. Their stories and photos, kept.
This week: tell us about your first job.
One family space, two doors onto the same moment. Tap "see their side" to feel how large and calm it becomes.
The people who matter most stayed on one platform, and the family drifted to apps that were never built for them.
Handing them a new app usually means handing them frustration, and sometimes risk, with nobody to call when something goes wrong.
A life's stories get captured once, in a book, and then it ends.
Photos scatter across apps and quietly get lost.
Someone in the family sets it up in minutes and invites everyone in.
Large and calm, voice-first, safe by default, and a help button with a real person behind the AI.
This week's story told in their own voice, the growing photo archive, and questions passed across the generations.
And nobody has built the bridge between them.
Keepsake services run around $99, and one was backed on Shark Tank, but those end. A living place does not.
The stories and photos are the family's own, and they are what pull the young back.
A family subscription, paid by the generation in the middle. A human help tier, a printed story book as a keepsake, and never ads.
It was not built for the people who find it hardest, and there is nobody to call when something goes wrong.
They visit rather than live there; the stories and the archive are family-only and irreplaceable.
It is designed for exactly that: simpler modes, gentle family oversight, and help that never gets impatient.
A book ends. A living place does not.
All twenty-four ideas