Track your roommate's dishes before conflict starts

A shared kitchen accountability app where data replaces passive-aggressive Post-its.

Current sink state47dirty items logged this week · 12 still unresolved

By Sunday evening, the sink count had climbed to 47, up from 28 on Monday. Alex alone accounts for 6 of the 12 unresolved items — a trend that, if it continues, could push the household past the “boiling point” threshold by midweek.

The idea is simple: snap a photo of the offending dish, tag the person who left it, and move on. No notes on the counter, no passive-aggressive group chat messages. Just data. The dashboard aggregates everything — who's contributing most to the pile-up, how long items have been sitting, and when the sink is approaching critical mass.

Early adopters report that the mere act of logging creates accountability. “I used to just leave my mug in the sink thinking no one would notice,” said one roommate. “Now I see it on the feed and I feel weird about it.” The app sends gentle notifications — not accusations — when an item has been sitting for more than 24 hours.

The design brief was clear: make it useful enough to actually use, petty enough to be funny. The photo-based logging adds a layer of undeniable evidence. You can't argue with a picture of your crusty blender jar from yesterday morning.

Show methodology

This week's sink timeline

Mon5
Tue8
Wed6
Thu11
Fri7
Sat9
Sun12

Unresolved items — click an offender to highlight

  • Cast iron skillet with burnt eggs6/28/2026
  • Protein shaker bottle (3 days old)6/28/2026
  • Pasta pot with dried sauce6/27/2026
  • Baking sheet with grease6/26/2026
  • Chef knife and cutting board6/24/2026
  • Dutch oven with chili remnants6/22/2026

Data as of today. Source: vibemill.dev