March 2, 2026 · 5 min read

Your data should outlive your apps

Cloud-only tools hold your work hostage. When the service shuts down, your thinking disappears with it. There's a better way.

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The graveyard of cloud apps

Google has killed over 290 products and services. Not experiments — products that people depended on. Google Reader had millions of active users when it was shut down. Google Stadia promised a gaming revolution and lasted three years. Google Inbox reimagined email, earned devoted fans, and was quietly buried. Each time, users were told to export their data — if an export was even possible — and find somewhere else to go.

Google isn't alone. Evernote was once the default note-taking app for an entire generation of knowledge workers. It had 225 million users at its peak. Then it changed ownership, raised prices, stripped features, and became something its original users barely recognized. People who had built years of notes, research, and personal knowledge inside Evernote found themselves trapped in a degrading product with no clean way out.

Notion, for all its strengths, has had its share of outages — some lasting hours — during which millions of users simply could not access their work. Not their social media. Not their entertainment. Their work. The notes they needed for a meeting happening right now. The project plan they were presenting in twenty minutes. Gone, behind a loading spinner and a status page.

The fundamental problem

The issue isn't that these are bad companies or bad products. The issue is architectural. When your data lives exclusively on someone else's servers, you've made a bet. You've bet that the company will continue to exist, that it will continue to offer the product, that it won't change the pricing to something you can't afford, that it won't be acquired by someone who guts it, and that their servers will be available every single time you need them.

That's a lot of bets. And the historical record shows they don't always pay off.

Cloud-dependent tools create three specific risks:

Diagram: Local-first vs cloud-dependent architecture

What local-first actually means

Local-first is not the same as offline-only. It doesn't mean going back to the 1990s. It means your data lives on your device first, and syncing to the cloud is optional, additive, and under your control.

In a local-first architecture:

This isn't a theoretical framework. Obsidian proved that local-first can work at scale — it stores everything as plain Markdown files in a folder you control. The tradeoff is real (collaboration is harder, sync requires more engineering), but the benefit is profound: your data is yours.

How Depli handles your data

Depli stores all workspace data locally on your machine. Your notes, canvases, modules, and project structures live in readable file formats in a directory you can find, open, and back up yourself. No proprietary database you can't inspect. No binary blob that only Depli can parse.

This means several things in practice:

Open formats are a promise

Using open, readable formats isn't just a technical decision. It's a promise to the people who trust us with their thinking. It says: we believe your work belongs to you, not to us. We believe you should be able to leave at any time, taking everything with you, with zero friction.

This runs counter to standard startup advice. Lock-in is usually considered a feature, not a bug — it's how you retain users and build moats. But we think that logic is backwards. If the only thing keeping people in your product is the difficulty of leaving, you've already lost. People should stay because the tool is genuinely the best place for their work, not because their data is trapped.

Software comes and goes. Your thinking should endure.

The tools we use to think are among the most intimate software we interact with. They hold our half-formed ideas, our research, our plans, our creative work. That data deserves more than a terms-of-service agreement and a prayer that the servers stay on. It deserves to live on your machine, in your control, in formats that will be readable long after any individual app is gone.

That's the bet Depli makes. Not on our own permanence — but on yours.

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