Space-A
Space-A flight tracker for iPhone and web.
- scope
- public-data pipeline, web/iOS, alerts, payments
- status
- App Store v1.0.1
- reported reach
- 1,000+ users in first 2 months
- stack
- next.jstypescriptneonprismaclerkstripeswiftuivercel
screenshots



Problem
Space-A travel can save eligible military passengers real money, but the planning experience is fragmented across terminal pages, 72-hour schedule posts, PDFs, and social channels that change on their own schedule.
The audience is specific and practical: service members, veterans, and military families trying to understand where they can go, when flights might happen, and what they need before showing up.
What I built
I built the product end to end: schedule ingestion, terminal search, watch alerts, eligibility and signup flows, the public web app, native iOS app, Android companion, subscriptions, and the operational dashboards behind the product. The iOS app is live on the App Store as Space-A: AMC Flight Tracker.
- Tracks public AMC terminal schedules across 40+ terminals
- Supports terminal watches, email alerts, eligibility/profile flows, and signup prep
- Runs across web, iOS, and Android surfaces with shared account and entitlement state
- Reported reach: 1,000+ users in the first two months
- iOS App Store release: Space-A: AMC Flight Tracker v1.0.1
Status
Live on web and the App Store. Reported reach: 1,000+ users in the first two months. Apple lists Space-A: AMC Flight Tracker at v1.0.1, released May 20, 2026, with a decluttered Today experience, shorter onboarding, and refreshed App Store screenshots for the mobile launch.
Niche public-data products live or die on trust. The interface has to be fast and clear, but the deeper work is making source uncertainty visible enough for people to plan around it.