Work in progress
Kinspace
A private coordination app for plural systems, designed around local-first ownership, calm communication, and careful support for real-world use.
About
We’re a practical web and software shop based in Albany, New York, in the heart of the Capital Region. We help organizations shape useful systems around the way their work actually happens.
We build systems, but we don’t start with the system. We start with the work it has to support.
We pay attention to the way work moves through an organization: the requests, reports, handoffs, tools, decisions, and routines that keep the business running.
Those details matter because they’re where the real work lives. Before we suggest a website, automation, or custom software, we want to understand what already works, what needs to work better, and what the organization is trying to accomplish.
Sometimes that means reviewing an existing site or spreadsheet. Sometimes it means talking through an ordering process, a reporting routine, a customer request flow, or the places where information keeps getting copied, chased, delayed, or lost.
The goal is to make something useful, understandable, and maintainable: a system that fits the organization instead of forcing the organization to reshape itself around the system.
Work in progress
A few current projects show the kind of software thinking behind the business.
Work in progress
A private coordination app for plural systems, designed around local-first ownership, calm communication, and careful support for real-world use.
Work in progress
A desktop media app focused on fast local playback, shared viewing, and direct control over personal media without unnecessary cloud dependency.
Capital Region
I love the Capital Region because it feels grounded. Albany carries the weight of state history and public work, but the place is also full of small neighborhoods, practical businesses, old brick, river light, colleges, kitchens, shops, and people who know how things actually get done.
The scale feels right to me: big enough for real complexity, small enough that relationships still matter. You can hear the history in the buildings and still feel the everyday work happening around them.
That is the kind of place I want to build for. I like making useful systems for people nearby, with enough care that the finished thing feels like it belongs here: steady, thoughtful, and actually helpful.