About Atlas

One person, one project, no investors.

Atlas is built by Chris as a personal hub — the place I wanted to exist for organizing the slice of life that isn't a job. Side projects. Trips. Apartment renovations. The contacts I don't want to lose. The notes that don't belong in Notion or Slack or whatever team tool I'm using that quarter.

Most productivity apps are built for teams and then awkwardly downsized for individuals. Atlas works the other way: it starts as a personal space. No seat counts, no forced workspaces, no team setup before you've done anything. You sign up and you start charting.

Collaboration is on the way — inviting a friend to a project, sharing a trip plan, planning a renovation with a partner — but it will always be opt-in. The single-user experience won't get worse to make room for the multi-user one.

The starfield background isn't a gimmick — it's the spine of the metaphor. Atlas (the titan, the cartographer's name) is about charting territory. The app borrows from that: projects are territories, tasks are landmarks, contacts are the people on the map. Constellations come and go as you use it.

Atlas runs without third-party analytics scripts, advertising cookies, or data sold to anyone. The privacy policy has the full details.

This is a small, slow project. Releases ship when they're ready. The changelogtracks what's new.

Say hello

Bug reports, feature requests, or just a wave — information@mypersonalatlas.com.