For a while now, every time I finish building something, I end up with the same problem.
Where does it live?
A random domain I bought at 2am. A GitHub repo nobody finds. A subdirectory on some forgotten deployment. The project exists, but it has no home.
Gyroove is my answer to that.
What it is
Gyroove is not a single product. It's the place where everything I build lives — tools, APIs, SaaS apps, experiments, documentation, and ideas. One brand. One identity. Infinite products.
Think of it less like a startup and more like a studio. A place where things get made, published, and connected to each other over time.
Why build in public
Because building in private is how good projects die quietly.
Writing about what I'm building forces me to think clearly about it. It creates a record of decisions and mistakes. And eventually, it builds an audience — people who care about the work before the work is finished.
This journal is part of that. I'll write about what I'm building, what I'm learning, what breaks, and what works.
What's coming
Right now Gyroove is just this — a homepage and a journal. But the roadmap is clear:
- Tools — free utilities for developers, built and hosted here
- Products — real SaaS apps with their own domains
- Labs — experiments that may or may not survive
- API Platform — developer APIs built on top of everything I make
- Open Source — public repos, contributions, and community work
None of that exists yet. That's the point.
The long game
This is not a sprint. Gyroove is something I'm building slowly and deliberately — adding one real thing at a time, never rushing to look bigger than I am.
If you're reading this, you're early. Stay around.