1 min read By NT²
Offline by default is not offline-only
A vault can work offline and still offer sync. The difference is whether the cloud becomes the owner of the data or just a blind carrier.
Product narratives about structured privacy, local-first vaulting, and encrypted handoffs.
1 min read By NT²
A vault can work offline and still offer sync. The difference is whether the cloud becomes the owner of the data or just a blind carrier.
1 min read By NT²
A friend asks to check the account number. You want to help, but you do not want your unlocked vault in someone else's hands.
1 min read By NT²
The person on the call needs to confirm one field. Your screen is ready to show an entire document.
1 min read By NT²
The vault app lives at se.nt2.me: sent to me. The phrase is playful, but the product idea is not.
1 min read By NT²
Most sharing stories focus on the sender. The recipient has a quieter problem: should I trust this file, and where should it go if I do?
1 min read By NT²
If the file is too sensitive for a chat thread, sending it through one more inbox is not automatically better.
2 min read By NT²
Your accountant needs the statement today. They do not need a permanent copy sitting in three inboxes and a downloads folder.
2 min read By NT²
Your co-founder needs the production key before a weekend deploy. They do not need your personal vault, your old notes, or a zip file of everything.
2 min read By NT²
The first fifty items are easy. The real test is whether a vault still feels calm after years of credentials, documents, bank records, and notes.
1 min read By NT²
Your laptop holds client API keys, a family insurance policy, and a crypto wallet note. The problem is not storage space. It is boundaries.