Coming Soon

Where things take shapebefore they're ready.

Coming Soon is the pre-release layer of InkSynth. What you see here is in active development: being tested, refined, and pushed until they're useful enough to stand on their own.

Some projects graduate to Tools. Some stay here permanently. All of them start here.

How this works

Not a roadmap. Not a promise. A working environment where the filter is whether something is genuinely useful, not whether it sounds impressive.

01

A real problem

Every project here starts with something specific: a gap, a friction point, a thing that should exist but doesn't. Not "this would be interesting to build." More like "why doesn't this exist yet."

02

Built and tested against reality

Lab projects run with real inputs and real users before they go anywhere. The question isn't whether the output looks good in a demo. It's whether it holds up when someone who actually needs it tries to use it.

03

Graduated or stayed

If a project proves useful at scale and has a clear audience, it moves to Tools. If it serves a specific niche well, it stays here permanently. Either outcome is fine.

Currently building

What's currently being built.

ContentSpark

Active Testing

Takes any piece of content and produces three fully developed social media angles — copy, CTAs, and hashtags for each. Paste an article, a Fieldroot output, or any source material; ContentSpark analyzes it against your business context and builds three distinct angle options ready to post.

Social copy generation is solid. Image generation is being evaluated for a future iteration — stripped for now to keep runs fast and output consistent. Tool is live and usable; the image layer will return as a standalone capability when it meets the quality bar.

In Development

Quit Companion

A guided support tool for people trying to quit tobacco. Not a medical device, not a lecture. A consistent presence for people who are doing the hard part on their own.

Most cessation programs assume the person has a support network, reliable access to care, and sustained motivation. Many people have none of those. Quit Companion is built around that reality. It meets people where they are and stays available when nothing else is.

Access model

Free to start. Optional continuation after six weeks.

Distribution

Clinician-referred. Activated by the patient, not the practice.

Status

Building. Not yet open for early access.

Now in Tools

NearNow

A local intelligence agent that scouts events, activities, and deals in a city and synthesizes them into a readable digest. Fort Wayne is the first city. Any city above a population threshold is in scope.

Input: a city and an interest category. Output: a structured local digest: events, weekend ideas, family guides, or deals, depending on what you ask for.

In Development

Savvia

An assistant designed to run alongside you continuously, not just answer questions when asked. Configurable to your actual workflow. Persistent by design.

This is the backend system that built this site and the infrastructure supporting it. Think of it as a live demo.

In development. Worth watching.

What this section is not

This is not a preview catalog or a way to generate excitement before a launch. There are no release dates here. Nothing here is announced until it's real enough to matter.

If something turns out to be the wrong idea, it stops. The goal is useful output, not a growing list of projects.

Not vaporware

Everything shown here is being actively built, not imagined.

Not a waitlist farm

We don't collect signups to show momentum. You'll hear about it when it's ready.

Not a feature list

Lab projects are defined by the problem they solve, not the capabilities they expose.

Not frozen

This page will change. Descriptions shift as projects evolve. That is the point.

From Coming Soon to Tools

The line between Coming Soon and Tools is not a version number. It is whether the tool is reliable enough, useful enough, and well-defined enough to put in front of anyone who shows up asking for it. Some projects reach that point. Some don't need to.