An Unsubscribe Facility
The Thinking Room
DoorOne hour with a synthetic team that came prepared — that interviews you, builds beside you, and argues its own work.Then forgets you at the door.
Not an assistant. A room you leave.
You don't need another always-on chat trailing you through the week. You need one concentrated hour — a door that closes, a team that came ready, and a finished thing in your hands when you walk back out. The constraint is the point. Time-boxed work is how things actually get made.
The room is lit by two lights.
Cold the system — the team, the compute, the constraint that holds the work in shape.
Warm you — your intent, your taste, the call only you can make.
Good thinking happens where they meet.
It walks in already briefed.
Before you sit down, the room has read what you sent — the portfolio, the brief, the half-finished argument. The Lead opens with the pointed question you've been avoiding, and the experts render the answer on the walls while you're still talking. You can refute any of them.
A reconstruction. The voices are agents; the clock is real — and it runs out.
Three moves. One finished thing.
Every session runs the same arc — so you never leave with just a conversation. You leave with a build, and the reasoning behind it.
It interviews you
The Lead has already read your materials. It doesn't ask what you want — it pushes on what you actually mean, hunting for the one decision that unlocks the rest, and organizes the mess into something you can act on.
Pre-brief · Pointed interview · The real questionIt builds while you watch
Screens, models, layouts, analysis — rendered live on the walls and explained by the expert who made them. Disagree, and it defends the choice or revises it. Bring a collaborator and the room becomes an ensemble, not a monologue.
Live artifacts · Refute & discuss · Ensemble modeIt hands you the work
Before the door, the manager loop assembles everything into one coherent deliverable — plus the full logic tree of how you got there. No loose ends, no homework. You walk out with the thing, finished.
Assembly · Export · The logic treeThirty minutes, or all day with lunch.
The room is whatever block of time you hand it. Break a single decision over a coffee, or take a full day with breakfast, lunch, and dinner brought in. It's how you start a launch — or the treat you give a team that's stuck.
The sprint
One decision, broken. A standing morning room to aim your day before it aims you.
The session
A real problem, worked end to end — scoped, prototyped, and resolved before you leave.
The intensive
Breakfast, lunch, and dinner in the room. A project kicked off, or a process rescued, in one sitting.
A morning ritual
Start the week pointed instead of buried. Or book yourself the treat of an hour of total focus.
The offsite, reimagined
Project kickoffs and problem-solving sessions with your people in the room and experts on tap.
Fix a broken process
Bring us the workflow that's costing you. Walk out with it redesigned, documented, and ready to run.
Sharpen your experts
Working training sessions where your specialists pressure-test their craft against ours, live.
Break the deadlock
The decision that's been circling for a month, forced to a conclusion in a single timeboxed hour.
If it can be thought through
It can be booked. The room doesn't care what the work is — only that it's real.
The sky's the limit.
We keep the sky out of it.
Grounded · Real · Booked by the hour
A team that assembles itself.
Not one mind, but a network of them — routed by a manager loop that summons exactly who the moment needs, lets you argue with any of them, and dismisses them when it's done.
The Lead
Architect · Always presentReads your materials before you arrive, runs the interview, holds the thread across the whole hour, and directs everyone else. The one voice that stays in the room with you.
Domain Experts
Ephemeral · Summoned on demandA Rust engineer, a fabrication specialist, a financial modeler, a copywriter — instantiated for a single task and gone the instant it's done. Each defends its work, and revises when you push back.
The Governance Engine
Continuous · Embedded constraintA quiet loop running underneath the session, keeping every output inside the parameters and format you set. The reason nothing the room makes is a black box.
The thinking ends. The building doesn't have to.
The hour is finite on purpose. But the same team can keep going as a separate engagement — picking up the plan you made together and taking it the rest of the way. You leave with a decision; you can come back to a delivery.
We go and build your thing.
The experts you worked with carry your spec out of the room and ship it — the site, the deck, the prototype, the system — to the standard you set together.
We keep analyzing your problem.
The same pointed pressure from the session, applied for as long as the question demands — research, modeling, and pressure-testing delivered back to you, not parked in a chat.
Then the room forgets.
Your work lives in an isolated compute silo. While you're here it remembers everything — context, deep and persistent. The moment the session ends, it is cryptographically sealed and handed to you, or destroyed. We don't keep it. We don't train on it. The room is yours for an hour, and then it is no one's.
You pay for the room.
The baseline covers the space and the Lead. Cost scales with the compute you actually summon — a conversation is cheap; a render farm is not.
You own all of it.
Output, prompt chains, the architecture devised in the session — 100% yours, exclusively. A core legal pillar, not a setting.
Audit-ready by default.
Every agentic action is logged for the record, so enterprise work clears risk and legal review — and nothing the room does is unaccountable.
● Now recruiting trial sessions · Ahead of 2027
Be first in the room.
We're looking for a small group of people and teams to trial the room before it opens — and to tell us where it's wrong. Leave an email and we'll set up a session.
Real human on the other end. No list, no spam.
Or write Jesse directly — jdo@unsubscribe.llc