Your phone is full of people you love. Your screen isn't.
Audit any day of screen time: hours of strangers, algorithms, and news — minutes, maybe seconds, of the people the phone exists to keep close.
Looking closer
The imbalance isn't chosen; it's defaulted. Feeds are engineered for presence and the camera roll isn't — your own people lost the attention war to infrastructure, not to preference.
What follows
A floating layer is the counterweight: it gives your people the one thing feeds have — automatic, recurring appearance. The ratio moves the day it's installed.
If you want the mechanism
Bubbles In Time is the practical version of everything above: a floating, on-device rotation of memories you chose, arriving through the day at a cadence you set. $2.99 once — no subscription, no ads, no account, nothing uploaded.
Quick answers
Does it work offline?
Completely — there's no server, so bubbles float with or without a connection.
Does the app upload or share my photos?
No. Memories stay on your device; the app has no account system and its Play listing declares no data shared.