We watched our guards in our village manually write visitor names in a logbook. Same logbook for years, water-damaged, illegible. Residents would call the guardhouse to let their guests in. HOAs would post announcements on tarpaulin. Maintenance requests went nowhere.
Qmunidad started as a personal project to fix that. One codebase, two people: Cristian handling the code, and Aubrey Faith handling design and QA, making sure every screen looks right and works right before it ships.
The name comes from komunidad, the Filipino word for community. Every module is named the same way: LoQate, SeQurity, DoorQeep. English words with Q marking the core sound, because the platform should feel sharp and purposeful.
This is not a VC-backed startup. There is no sales team. No support department. Just two people who care about getting this right, and who answer support emails themselves.
Handles all engineering: architecture, backend, frontend, and infrastructure. Every line of code shipped is his.
Handles visual design and quality assurance. Every color, every layout, every release goes through her before it reaches users.