Stop hunting for music. Start working.
I got tired of spending twenty minutes finding a playlist instead of building something. Every platform thinks it knows better than me what I want to hear. MTW Radio doesn't. You tell it what you need, it finds it. Feed it an artist you love and it maps the whole neighborhood around them, not just the radio hits everyone already knows.
Skip something enough times and it learns. Play something on repeat and it pays attention. It's not a music app anymore at that point — it's your taste, automated. Built in the workshop, for the workshop.
You've got a problem. Five dead philosophers have already solved it.
Most philosophy sits behind 400 pages of academic language nobody asked for. TPE cuts through that. Pick your situation, pick your council, and get straight advice from stoic, eastern, existential, and folk wisdom traditions. Marcus Aurelius tells you to hold the line. Lao Tzu says stop pushing. Camus says burn it down and build something honest from the ash. They don't all agree and that's the point.
Follow the path, branch it, flip it, or blow the whole thing up and try a different direction entirely. The engine tracks where you go and what resonates. It suggests reading that actually matters for where you are right now, with real world translations and practical applications — not theory for its own sake.
The ideas that shaped the engine, in a format you can carry.
The TPE council doesn't just live in a browser. The Tinker Field Editions are the physical and digital companions to the philosophy work — curated, annotated, and built for use not display. Covering the same traditions the engine draws from, each volume is designed to be read on a bench, in a truck, or anywhere you do your thinking.
Not a textbook. A toolkit. Available now as PDFs with print editions in progress.
The internet is lying to you by omission.
Standard search gives you what's popular. That's not the same as what's true or what you actually need. There's a whole layer of search most people never touch because nobody taught them it exists. SOA teaches it through doing, not reading about doing.
If you need real answers, if you're researching something that matters, if you're tired of the first page of results being useless — this changes how you work. Ask better questions. Get better answers.
A toddler's ride-on car didn't need this much engineering. We did it anyway.
Started as a simple conversion. Ended up with voice commands, RGB lighting zones, WebSocket wireless control, and a safety cutoff that kills power when the kid gets out of the seat. The car was the excuse. The point was proving any physical object can be made smarter with the right hardware and a clear head.
If you've got something that needs embedded control, wireless operation, or just needs to do more than it currently does — this is what that process looks like when you actually finish it.
You've got a vision. Your hands might not be there yet. That's what this is for.
Not everyone can draw. Not everyone can sculpt. But everyone has something in their head that deserves to exist in the physical world. MindScribe sits down with you through conversation, interprets what you're trying to make, builds a profile around your creative vision, then drives a pen plotter to produce a physical artifact from it.
Artist and inventor tool. Symbiotic. The more you work with it the more it understands how you think and what you're reaching for. Built for the maker who has the idea but needs a creative partner to help it cross from imagination into something real you can hold.
Every good build started with a note that almost got lost.
Ideas disappear. Parts get ordered twice. Projects stall because nobody can find where they left off. MTFN is the notebook built because nothing else worked the way a real workshop runs. Inventory, purchase orders, project logs, files — all connected, all searchable, all in one place.
Not a generic app squeezed into a workshop context. Built from scratch for how a multi-division operation actually operates day to day. Because the difference between a project that ships and one that dies in a bin somewhere is almost always documentation.