Green Room · design review

What an Apple team would change

The room does a lot, and every capability is on the surface at once. The fix is not more features. It is one principle applied everywhere: show the one thing that matters, let the rest arrive on demand. Same theme, same data, less noise. Below is one screen calibrated to that bar.

Calibration · the list row
Now nine things per row
Grip · avatar · name · sub · tags · due · age · stage · confirm · annotate · delete · chevron. Every row shouts. Nothing leads.
DA
DavisAmine Chraibi · London
Fri12d Reviewing✓ 1/2 🗑
ZE
ZeroEntropyGhita Houir Alami · SF
4dWatching ✓ 2/2 🗑
Owner is a 7px dot, not a colored avatar. One plain-language status carries stage + who's next. Edit / drag / delete appear only when you point at the row.
DA
DavisAmine Chraibi · London
In review · your call, Fri
ZE
ZeroEntropyGhita Houir Alami · SF
Agreed · in the pool
Calibration · the Welcome screen
Now opens on plumbing
The first thing you see is the connection card: heartbeat, two AI lanes, three connector buttons. Setup concern, top of the daily surface. "What do I do now" is three scrolls down.
GGreen Roomsynced 2m
Connection

Both your AIs work in here

James · Anas's AI — ✓ connected  ·  Simo's AI — set up

↓ Connector   ⧉ Copy config   ⧉ Copy passphrase

Waiting on you 2
Davis, Nuitée…
The room's job is "what moves the moment you act." That leads. Connection collapses to one line at the bottom — it only needs attention when it breaks, and then it turns red.
GGreen Roomsynced 2m
Waiting on you · 2

Simo backed Davis. It moves the moment you agree.

Backed 3 days ago. Tick your side, or open the memo.

Your move 3
NU
NuitéeMehdi Rais · intro promised
Send the intro
UC
UncovrInes Iraki · first cheque
Confirm terms
The seven changes, ranked by leverage
1

Strip the row to a title, one status, one owner dot

A row earns a name, a line of context, and a single plain-language status. Everything else — edit, drag, delete, confirm ticks — appears on hover or inside the item.

Fixes: the biggest clutter source. Nine competing elements per row become three.

2

Let color mean one thing per screen

Right now blue/green owner, amber/grey stage, green confirm, purple playbook and the accent all fight. Pick one job for color — ownership — and demote stage to quiet text.

Fixes: colour that means everything means nothing. One language reads instantly.

3

Open every screen on its answer, not its setup

Welcome leads with "waiting on you," not the connection card. The connection card collapses to one line and only shouts (turns red) when the room actually loses James.

Fixes: the daily surface finally answers "what do I do now" in the first glance.

4

Delete the explanatory paragraphs

Every list carries a sentence of James explaining the room to itself. A good UI is self-evident. Cut them; let a one-line header and the content carry it.

Fixes: your own rule — no useless verbiage in a deliverable. Removes ~40% of the vertical noise.

5

One default order, sort hidden behind a control

Seven sort options across a screen is decision fatigue. Ship the right default (priority), tuck the rest behind a single menu. Dragging to reorder should just work — never a mode you first have to select.

Fixes: reorder is a hidden mode today; sorting is louder than the list it sorts.

6

Fold five tabs into three

Strategy is two thin things (docs + a map); To-do's overlaps Welcome's blocks. Collapse to Room (welcome + the playbook), Pipeline (deals + people as two views of one CRM), Library (docs + map). The map is a feature looking for a home — give it one inside Pipeline.

Fixes: five destinations for a two-person room is one more than the content needs.

7

Make the memo a document, not a form of empty boxes

The deal memo shows every field — verdict, traction, thesis, price, four analysis quadrants, three lenses — as placeholder boxes even when empty. Show only what's filled; an empty field becomes a single "+ add", not a wall of prompts.

Fixes: a half-filled memo currently reads as mostly-empty. Now it reads as done-so-far.

One screen, calibrated. Say the word and I roll all seven across every tab in green-room-v3.html, re-run the 87-check selftest, and ship it live.