The website Fable 5 built for my iOS App Kyle launched Xtraktr, an iOS app that uses an on-device AI to help users clarify and publish their thoughts through a guided question-and-answer process, priced at $5.83 per month. The app runs entirely on the iPhone's chip to protect privacy and avoid server costs. You know things people would pay to hear, but writing them down is where they die. Tell Xtraktr the rough version and it asks one question at a time until your take is clear enough to publish. Say it or type it; the AI runs on your phone, not in a data center. The one that's still rattling around, half-formed. You answer, and it asks the next one. A summary, an outline, action items, a Q&A doc. The bones of your post, in your words, not invented for you. Xtraktr won't write your opinions for you or answer random questions. It draws out what you already think and gives it back in a shape you can use. See how it works → /how-it-works Almost every AI answers you from a data center: rooms of servers that run on a lot of power and water. Xtraktr's model runs on your iPhone's own chip, so your questions never go there. That's also why it's about $5.83 a month instead of $20. There's no server bill behind every reply. I use Xtraktr to think through all my thoughts out loud. I wanted to take advantage of communicating with AI without having to sacrifice my privacy. — Kyle, who makes Xtraktr The way you explain things at a dinner table is a content style. Some people tell the story, some draw the map, some pick the fight. The Dinner Table Test tells you yours in eight questions, and the free book covers which formats are built out of exactly that behavior.