Product
Project Elrond
Project Elrond is a private planning and coordination app for arranging invite-only meetings, building shared briefs, and collaborating with Others inside a structured workspace.
It is built for small groups that need timing, venue details, shared notes, and follow-up work kept in one place before and after each session.
Available as an iPhone concept preview.
iPhone
iPhone screenshots
Swipe through the iPhone flow for planning private sessions, inviting Others, sharing briefs, confirming venues, and reviewing the next steps after each meeting.
What Project Elrond does
Project Elrond helps users organize private meetings from start to finish. A session can include the circle, time, place, shared agenda, notes, attachments, and follow-up actions in a single workspace.
It is designed for invite-only planning, small-group coordination, and structured collaboration with Others without losing track of timing or context.
Core capabilities
- Create invite-only sessions with time and place details
- Invite Others and assign roles for editing or coordination
- Build a shared brief with agenda items, notes, and attachments
- Track confirmations, timing windows, and meeting logistics
- Save decisions, follow-up tasks, and archived session history
Session flow
Each session begins with a title, a time, a place, and the list of Others who should be included. From there, the brief can be filled out, the agenda can be arranged, and the venue details can be confirmed.
After the meeting, Project Elrond keeps the summary, decisions, and next actions available so the group can continue working from the same shared context.
Collaboration
Project Elrond is built around lightweight collaboration. Others can be invited into a session, granted different roles, and kept aligned through the same brief, notes, and updates.
The goal is to make planning feel calm and intentional instead of scattered across separate messages, reminders, and documents.
Important
Project Elrond is a coordination and collaboration concept. Availability, feature scope, and release timing may change.
Users remain responsible for handling schedules, logistics, and confidential information appropriately.