Most habit trackers ask: did you do the thing?
AllOS asks: how are you, actually?
The difference sounds small. It isn't.
The problem with habit trackers
Habit trackers are binary. You ran or you didn't. You meditated or you didn't. They're great for building routines — but they can't tell you whether your life is working.
You can hit every checkbox and still feel like something's off. That "something" usually lives in one of the dimensions a habit tracker ignores: your relationships, your sense of purpose, your physical environment, your financial stress.
Why 8 axes?
AllOS tracks eight dimensions:
- Health — physical energy, sleep, movement
- Finance — stability, stress, progress toward goals
- Relationships — quality of your closest connections
- Work — output, meaning, sustainability
- Learning — growth, curiosity, new skills
- Purpose — alignment between what you do and why
- Energy — mental capacity, not just physical
- Environment — your space, surroundings, and context
These aren't arbitrary. They map to the categories where people consistently report either flourishing or struggling in long-term wellbeing research.
The radar reveals what checklists hide
When you fill in a radar over weeks, patterns emerge that a checklist buries:
- Your Work score spikes every time your Relationships score drops
- Your Energy tanks two weeks after Finance stress peaks
- Your Purpose score is consistently low — even when everything else looks fine
You can't see this in a habit log. You need a picture.
One question a day
AllOS doesn't ask you to journal 30 minutes. It asks one question per axis per day — a 2-minute check-in. By week 4, those questions have depth: they're not asking what you did, they're asking what you noticed, what repeated, what you'd change.
The compounding is the point.
If you've been tracking habits and still feel like you're missing something, start a free AllOS account. It takes two minutes to set up and the first question is waiting.