A therapist's garage office was working against her.
Dr. Maya Reyes converted her detached garage into a telehealth practice. Between sessions she was manually adjusting a ring light, toggling a portable heater, and silencing a white noise machine — burning 8 minutes between every appointment on logistics instead of transition.
Uplink mapped her calendar to her environment. At :50 past each hour, the overhead light dims to 2700K, the white noise fades to 30%, and the thermostat steps up one degree — a physical signal to her nervous system that the session is closing. At :00, everything resets for the next client: crisp 4000K, 60% white noise, 68°F.
"I stopped thinking about the room. I started being more present in it."

fewer app interactions per hour for Uplink clients, measured across 90 days of active use.

His best work happened at 10 AM. The lighting didn't know that.
Marcus Webb, a senior product designer, noticed his most generative work — sketching, concepting, system thinking — clustered between 9 and 11 AM. By afternoon he was reviewing and iterating. By 6 PM, writing documentation. His environment treated all three modes identically.
Uplink programmed a 12-hour color temperature arc: 2700K at 7 AM while email is cleared, stepping to 5000K daylight by 10 AM for deep work, then easing back to 3800K by 4 PM for review sessions, and returning to 2500K amber by 7 PM. The shades track the arc — widening as light peaks, narrowing as it falls.
"I didn't realize my environment was flattening my whole day into one undifferentiated blur. Now every phase feels distinct."
of Uplink clients report feeling less mentally cluttered in their home office within the first week of activation.
Two people. One room. Completely different needs.
Priya Nair and Daniel Osei share a converted loft as their shared workspace. Priya, a UX researcher, needs silence and cool air for deep-focus sessions. Daniel, a music producer, needs warmth and low-frequency audio monitoring. Every morning began with a negotiation neither of them wanted.
Uplink mapped the loft into two acoustic and climate zones using existing HVAC dampers and a directional speaker array. When Priya activates Focus Mode from her phone, her half of the room drops to 65°F and white noise fills her zone at 45dB. Daniel's zone holds at 70°F with studio-flat audio monitoring. Each profile is a single tap — or triggered automatically by calendar.
"We stopped negotiating the room. Now it just becomes what each of us needs, and we both get more done."


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