est. 2024
vol. Ijun 2026
7 posts tagged circadia.
One month into open alpha, Circadia has moved from a tool I built for my own impossible sleep into an app with enough real N24 data to make the research side feel less theoretical. The Community tab is live, Jon replaced the particle filter forecast with a tag-aware Kalman-IMM model, and the app now has enough users to expose the administrative layer under health software: platform rules, security audits, server costs, and the boring financial reality of keeping something useful alive.
Read →May 27Dayah DoverWhy your τ tile might look a little different from this morning — and why the change is mostly the math finally admitting it can't fit a 30-hour cycle onto a 24-hour clock face.
Read →May 26Dayah DoverWhy Circadia lets you change the math behind your sleep — and why my own settings look nothing like the defaults. Featuring a very bad Airbnb, a fourteen-hour lurch, and the embarrassing number of hours I do not spend asleep.
Read →May 25Dayah DoverI went down a rabbit hole this week about how to share your data with actual researchers without doing something stupid. Here's what I learned, what I built because of it, and a small ask at the end.
Read →May 25Jon MeriwetherCircadia's new adaptive forecast is better at handling skipped nights, naps, crashes, recovery sleep, and sudden changes in your sleep pattern. It learns only from sleep data people choose to share — and the more of your own history you share, the better chance Circadia has of understanding your pattern.
Read →May 17Jon MeriwetherShared sleep data does not disappear into a mysterious AI pile. It helps us replay history, grade forecasts, tune the recipe, and keep only changes that make Circadia more honest and useful.
Read →May 15Dayah DoverNone of the apps I tried even let me manually enter my sleep data, let alone predict my next bedtime or track my drift. So I built one. Two days into open alpha, here's what's been built, what's coming, and a real ask.
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