I work across time zones a lot. Scheduling meetings used to mean opening one of those popular time zone tools, waiting for the page to load through a wall of ads, clicking away three cookie banners, and then wrestling with an interface that felt like it hadn't been touched since 2009. Every single time.
The tools that came up in search results were bloated. They tracked everything. They were plastered with advertising. The UX made a simple task feel unnecessarily complicated. I just wanted to see whether 9am in London worked for someone in Singapore, without my browser firing off requests to a dozen ad networks to do it.
So I built this instead.
This was a vibe-coded project. I had a problem, I sat down and built something to solve it, and it turned out well enough that I thought other people might find it useful too. That's the whole story.
It's not a startup. There's no team, no roadmap deck, no growth targets. This isn't an SEO play designed to rank for "free meeting planner" and then upsell you on a Pro plan. There are no ads, no tracking pixels, no affiliate links buried in the templates.
Everything runs in your browser. The planner works without sending your data anywhere. The templates and tools are just HTML. Nothing about your usage is collected, sold, or monetised.
Over time the site grew beyond the original time zone planner. The templates started as things I kept rewriting from scratch for different meeting types. The tools came from similar frustrations: every "meeting cost calculator" I found was either paywalled, buried in a SaaS product I didn't want to sign up for, or just bad.
So those got built the same way: scratch an itch, keep it simple, put it online.
If you find something broken or have an idea, the help page has contact details. No promises on timelines, but genuine problems get fixed.