Vaco
A native Mac voice app for turning text into speech with multiple voices and adjustable playback speed. The interface stays quiet and direct so the words and the voice selection carry the experience.
mctools.site is the home for a growing set of apps made for real routines. Some are built for writing, some for voice, some for year long momentum, and some for health signals. Public releases are on the way, so for now this page is the preview shelf.
Preview screens below are custom mockups based on the apps in this workspace.
Active app concepts already represented on this page.
Mac, iPhone, and Android are all in the mix.
Writing, health, voice, and habit tools that are meant to stay useful.
Release links are intentionally held back until each build is ready.
Each product here comes from the app projects in this workspace, and each preview is shaped around the interface style already present in the code. Filter by platform if you only want to see one slice.
Dally appears in both iPhone and Android because it already has both versions in the workspace.
A native Mac voice app for turning text into speech with multiple voices and adjustable playback speed. The interface stays quiet and direct so the words and the voice selection carry the experience.
A Tamil writing workspace that lets you type phonetically and see formatted Tamil output beside it. The app is built like a focused writing desk, with drafts, word lookup, and typography choices in one place.
A year long challenge app that turns 365 days into a visual journey. The mood is part planner, part memory keeper, with each day tracked as a dot in a living grid.
A minimal health dashboard focused on recovery and real time stress. It pulls heart rate, HRV, resting heart rate, and sleep into a stripped back screen that feels more like an instrument than a lifestyle app.
Dally is the clearest cross-platform product on the page right now. The core loop is simple and strong: generate a year of activities, show where today sits in the 365-day arc, and let completion build visible momentum over time. The iPhone version feels further along. The Android version still reads as a promising prototype rather than a finished store release.
One iPhone implementation and one Android implementation are already in the workspace.
Each day maps to one activity and one visible position in the challenge grid.
The look is good enough to market, but the Android build still has prototype defaults, placeholder app identity, and signing work left before it is ready for the Play Store.
This page is already structured to swap preview labels for real store or download links later. Until then, the cards stay honest and simply say that the public versions are still on the way.