> EXCITABLE. EXACTABLE. EXECUTABLE. A shared universe of destinations and memory.
> Space is a SaaS platform presented by PromptFluid. It contains a collection of tools and toys that are released on a regular cadence.
> PromptFluid Official Briefing: You are reading from the ground. Space is above. We transmit because the colony cannot afford silence.
> You can ignore the story and still use everything. But if you want the deeper current: this relay exists because the colony is fragile, and Space is the only place the tools can grow without choking the ground.
> Creating an account creates a Star. Your Star is your identity within Space and unlocks Spacewalking capabilities and certain tools that require persistent state
That entry is experiential-first. RCRDBL is the records layer; XCTBL is the place to understand the model by walking through it.
“Fair point — that’s totally valid…” come on, are we supposed to just pretend this is an acceptable submission? I’m all in for vibe coding but at least be upfront about it and don’t waste other people’s time and energy.
What’s this supposed to be?
It’s an identity layer for tools that require persistent state — but it deliberately separates identity/authentication from recording and retention.
The fastest way to understand it is the new start route here:
RCRDBL is the records layer. It accepts signals (files, text, artifacts), retains them permanently, and does not authenticate users.
XCTBL is the external system that creates identities (“Stars”) and manages access to tools that need persistence.
The separation is intentional:
• One system remembers. • One system authenticates. • Tools sit on top.
There’s optional narrative framing, but it’s not required to use anything. Tools work without engaging with the story layer.
This is early, opinionated, and intentionally constrained. Curious how others think about permanent records, identity boundaries, and whether this kind of separation makes sense.