I save Instagram reels and then completely forget they exist. That's the whole problem. I'll save a reel about some Claude trick, feel productive, and never see it again. It rots in a list. The save button is where good intentions go to die. So I'm building the thing that drags them back out. Not another bookmark folder, those already exist and they don't work, because nothing ever nudges you to return. InSave's actual job is the reminder, not the saving. It pulls the few reels that mattered back in front of you instead of letting them sink. The catch I had to design around: there's no way to read your Instagram saves through any official API. Never has been. So InSave works differently. You share a reel into it (one tap from Instagram's share sheet), and later you can import your whole backlog from Instagram's own data export. Capture is the easy reflex. The smart part, deciding what's worth reminding you about, comes after.
I'm building a match strategy engine for my FIRST Global Challenge robotics team (Team Qatar). The 2026 game ("Igniting Innovation") is a wildfire-themed game where robots score by putting foam balls into goals and climbing a structure at the end, and the scoring has a twist that makes strategy genuinely non-obvious: your climb at the end isn't flat points, it's a multiplier on your ball-scoring, and it's shared across your whole 3-robot alliance. So "where should we put balls and when should we climb?" isn't something you can eyeball. This tool answers it. You describe what your robot can do (how many balls it holds, how fast it intakes, how fast it shoots, how long it takes to climb) and it works out how many scoring cycles fit in the 150-second match, the best place to score, when to stop and climb, and the expected points, with all the arithmetic shown so the team can check it.
I'm building WeekLog, a meeting compliance tracker for my FIRST Global Challenge robotics team (Team Qatar, ~21 people). The problem: our team has to document every meeting (attendance, what we built, what broke, photos of sketches) and hit a bunch of external deadlines, and right now that lives in a Google Drive folder where nobody can actually tell if we're keeping up. A folder full of files can't tell you "hey, last Thursday's meeting is missing its photos." So WeekLog flips it around. The spine is a calendar that creates obligations. I mark which days are meeting days, each day gets a checklist of required stuff, and the whole thing rolls up into a red/amber/green dashboard that just tells you, at a glance, where the team is slacking. A past meeting with a missing compulsory item goes red on its own. It also tracks standalone deadlines like our social media challenges (which actually score us competition points), so those stop sneaking up on us.
A fixed-camera AI system that turns one cheap recording of a school match into coach analytics, event reels, and a highlight clip for every player running fully on a local laptop with no subscriptions.