Thinking - About You [v0.9.1]

A recurring crash when discussing the long-term roadmap.

However, the "0.9" prefix suggests a lack of total integration. It is the phase of "almost." You are thinking about them, but there is still a slight latency between the thought and the action. You draft a text but don't send it. You see a sunset and instinctively reach for your phone, only to remember that the permissions for sharing such moments are still being negotiated. The Patch Notes of Intimacy

To think of someone in version 0.9.1 is to have moved past the initial discovery (v0.1) and the chaotic, experimental builds of early attraction. By this stage, the "user interface" of the other person is familiar. You know the exact cadence of their laughter; you can predict their reaction to a specific movie trailer; you have mapped the geography of their silence. Thinking About You [v0.9.1]

Thinking About You [v0.9.1] In the landscape of human connection, we have entered the "versioning" era of intimacy. "Thinking About You [v0.9.1]" represents that specific, agonizingly beautiful stage of a relationship—or a memory—that is nearly complete but still inherently "beta." It is the state of a connection that is functional and frequent, yet still contains bugs, unoptimized code, and the looming threat of a system crash. The Architecture of a Thought

What distinguishes [v0.9.1] from its predecessors is the incremental refinement. The habit of over-explaining jokes. A recurring crash when discussing the long-term roadmap

To think about someone in [v0.9.1] is to acknowledge that the connection is meaningful enough to be tracked, updated, and maintained, even if the "final release" remains a distant, shimmering goal. It is a testament to the fact that in the human experience, the most interesting parts are often found in the builds that aren't quite finished yet.

This version is characterized by a hyper-awareness of the other person’s presence in your mental background processes. They are no longer a pop-up notification; they are part of the operating system. You find yourself viewing the world through a dual-lens: How do I see this? and How would they see this? The Stability of the "Almost" You draft a text but don't send it

Response time during emotional "high-load" periods.