Hinari Nagi !new! May 2026
Hinari Nagi was a software engineer who hated wasted motion. Every morning, she watched her elderly neighbor, Mr. Elara, struggle to carry groceries up three flights of stairs. Every evening, she saw students at the bus stop miss their ride because the schedule was a mystery. Everywhere she looked, small inefficiencies bled into big frustrations.
Nagi spent that weekend building the “puck”—a small, physical cube with a dial that pointed to colored magnets: red for therapy, blue for meals, green for outside time. The boy turned the dial himself. For the first time, he initiated his own schedule without prompting. hinari nagi
One night, Nagi couldn’t sleep. She opened her laptop and started coding—not a grand app, but a tiny, hyperlocal tool. She called it Stepwise . Hinari Nagi was a software engineer who hated wasted motion
But the real breakthrough came when a local mom, Mrs. Voss, knocked on Nagi’s door. “My son is non-verbal,” she said. “He understands numbers. Could Stepwise tell him when his therapy session starts without a screen?” Every evening, she saw students at the bus
Then she added a second feature: a simple LED sign at the bus stop. Stepwise pulled live bus data, stripped away every number except “minutes until next bus,” and displayed it in giant green digits. No app to download. No login. Just a number.