Changelog

Built in the open.

What shipped, what was decided, and why — newest first. An app that asks for this much trust should be watchable while it’s made.

  1. July 2026 site

    Live at getclarence.app

    The site has a real address and the waitlist is open. The guides shelf now stands at seventeen — friendship drift, reconnection, check-ins, hard moments, long distance, family, and the honest tool comparisons — every one written to be useful whether or not you ever install Clarence.

  2. July 2026 guides

    Five new guides

    The guides shelf grows from one to six: reconnecting with an old friend after years, replying to a text you ignored for weeks, keeping in touch as an adult, and two honest comparisons — personal CRMs and reminder apps — that name the real alternatives before saying where they fall short. Each one is written to be useful whether or not you ever install Clarence.

  3. July 2026 site

    The storefront opens

    This website — the manifesto, the privacy page, pricing, and the waitlist — ships before the app does, on purpose. If Clarence is going to ask to read your messages, the promises should be on the record first, where they can be held against us.

  4. July 2026 build

    A window that opens — already locked down

    The Mac app’s foundation is up: an empty window that launches, sandboxed, with no ability to load remote code and a single narrow bridge between what you see and what touches your data. Boring on screen, load-bearing underneath — the security baseline went in before the first feature, not after the last one.

  5. June 2026 security

    The threat model, before the first feature

    We wrote down every way an app like this could be attacked or misused — hostile message text, the send path, the drafting AI, leaks of things that were promised discarded — ranked them, and assigned each a design that answers it. It’s a living document every stretch of building re-reads. The public version lives on the privacy page.

  6. June 2026 decision

    Clarence comes to the Mac

    The decision that started all this: the Mac is where your real message history lives, and the only place a third-party app can read iMessage at all — locally, with your permission, going nowhere. We proved the heart of it first: the drift-detection engine, run against real message rhythms on a real Mac, found the same people the phone prototype had already validated.

  7. Spring 2026 origin

    Where this started

    Clarence began as a phone prototype and one question: can software honestly tell, from rhythm alone — who, when, how often, never the words — which friendships are drifting? It could. The people it surfaced were the right people, the messages got sent, and some conversations that had been quiet for years are not quiet anymore.

Be there when it opens

Clarence is being built in the open, for the Mac, right now. Leave your email and you’ll hear from us twice: once when the beta opens, once when it ships. Nothing else.

One plan, 14-day trial, no spam — ever.