What this is

Brickpilot is a working notebook for supervised driver-assistance experiments. The useful part is not a single setting or a big claim. It is the loop: drive, mark the moment, review the evidence, write down what changed, and keep the next test small enough to understand.

The project page is meant to hold the parts that are safe to make public: what the tool is for, what kind of evidence it collects, and what the latest project question is.

Why it matters

Road feel disappears quickly if it only lives in memory. A short note during a drive can become a timestamp, a replay window, a review label, and eventually a decision about whether a change is worth keeping.

Bird photo used as a sample inline project image
Photo caption

Current shape

  • Keep public writing separate from private logs.
  • Prefer small claims that can be checked later.
  • Make the project page useful even when JavaScript is unavailable.

The end result should read like a project page instead of a product pitch.