On Kind
I've been wanting a full picture of my health in one place. Not a fitness app yelling at me to close rings. Not seven different trackers each owning one slice. Just a calmer, more complete view — sleep, weight, labs, energy, mood, what I'm eating, what I'm taking — that I can actually keep up with.
That's what I'm trying to build with Kind.
Why I think there's something here
Most health apps I've tried optimize for the intense user — the runner, the lifter, the quantified-self person logging macros to the gram. That's great if it's you, but I don't think it's most people. A lot of us just want to understand our health, not train for it. We'd happily punch in a few numbers a week if the result was a coherent picture instead of seven disconnected dashboards.
That gap between hardcore fitness apps and "nothing" feels real. I keep bumping into it. Friends mention it too. I might be wrong, but it seems like there's room for a one-stop shop that treats health more like a long-running journal than a sport.
AI where it earns its keep
I'd like to lean on AI where it sensibly helps — parsing a photo of a meal, making sense of a lab PDF, summarizing a week — anywhere it removes friction without burning the runway. The bar I'm trying to hold: does this make logging easier, and does it still work economically if a lot of people use it? If yes, ship it. If not, keep it manual for now and revisit later.
It's not AI for its own sake. It's just trying to find the lowest-friction path to a useful picture of your health.
Still early
The shape is still settling, and I'd rather under-promise than over-pitch something that isn't real yet. But I think there's something here, and I'm starting to build it.
If you've ever wanted a single place for your health that isn't shouting at you, I'd love to hear what you'd want from it.