That's not a tagline. It's a belief that shapes every decision we make — what we build, how we price it, and what we think software should be.
Every software team runs the same loop. Users report problems. Product managers triage. Developers build. QA tests. Ops deploys. It takes weeks, sometimes months. By the time the fix ships, the user has forgotten they asked for it.
We kept asking: what if the loop was instant? What if the user could say “this is broken” and the app could fix itself — not in the next sprint, but in the next five minutes?
That question became Chorus. An AI team that builds your app, then keeps improving it based on what people actually say when they use it. Not analytics. Not surveys. Real words, from real users, acted on immediately.
We call it “self-living software.” Because the best software isn't the kind you ship and forget. It's the kind that keeps getting better on its own.
October 2025
Ben watches his team spend weeks translating user feedback into Jira tickets, sprint plans, and shipped code. The same cycle, every time. Users say what they want. Developers rebuild from scratch. By the time it ships, the request is stale.
November 2025
"What if the app could just... listen?" Not listen like analytics-listen. Actually hear what users say, understand what they mean, and fix itself. No tickets. No sprints. No developer bottleneck.
December 2025
First working version of the feedback widget + AI orchestrator. A user taps a button, types "the search is slow," and 4 minutes later the app has a new index and faster queries. It works. It actually works.
January 2026
Chorus becomes a full platform. AI team with specialized agents (Lead, Dev, QA, Design, PM). GitHub integration. Vercel deployment. Supabase database. The whole stack, orchestrated by AI, driven by feedback.
February 2026
Chorus opens to early users. Free to build, BYOK pricing model. The bet: people will build things they never could before, and those things will evolve in ways nobody expected.
Founder
I've spent my career watching the same pattern repeat: talented people with great ideas, blocked by the gap between what they want to build and the technical skills required to build it.
I built Chorus because I believe that gap is closing — and I want to be the one who closes it. Not with another drag-and-drop builder or code generator that spits out a dead prototype. With a platform that builds real, living software that gets better every day.
The feedback widget is the thing I'm most proud of. It's the answer to a question I've been asking for years: “What would software look like if it could hear its users?”
The people who use software every day understand it better than the people who built it. We design everything around this belief. The feedback widget isn't a feature — it's the foundation.
Databases, deployments, CI/CD, type checking, quality gates — none of that should be your problem. We absorb the complexity so you can focus on what your app should do, not how it works.
We don't mark up AI costs. We don't hide token usage. We don't gatekeep features behind enterprise tiers. You can see every API call, every cent, every line of code.
When the gap between "I wish this worked differently" and "it does now" shrinks from weeks to minutes, something fundamental shifts. People start expecting software to listen. And they're right to.
Your code lives in your GitHub. Your app runs on your Vercel. Your data sits in your Supabase. If Chorus disappeared tomorrow, everything you built keeps running. We believe in this deeply.
We tell you what we can't do. We show you our weaknesses on the comparison page. We publish real build costs. This industry has too much hype and not enough straight talk.
The AI app builder market is crowded with tools that compete on build speed. Who can generate an app fastest? Who has the prettiest output? Who burns the fewest tokens?
We think that's the wrong race.
The right question isn't “how fast can you build it?” It's “how long does it stay useful?”
We're betting that the tools which win the next decade won't be the fastest builders. They'll be the ones that keep software alive, evolving, and aligned with what users actually need — automatically, continuously, without anyone needing to schedule a sprint.
That's what we're building. Come help us prove it.
Chorus is in early access. Build something real, tell us what works, help shape what this becomes.