Yajigo is a space for the kind of gathering the internet forgot to build.
Most online connection is asynchronous by design — posts left for later, messages answered when convenient, conversations that never quite happen. We optimized for scale and got distance in return. The person on the other side of the screen became an abstraction.
Yajigo brings back presence.
It is a lightweight widget you embed on your website — a small, honest signal that says: I am here. Come in. A live indicator shows visitors whether you're available for a real conversation right now. A schedule shows when you'll be back. A notification can tell people the moment you go live.
That's it. No feed. No followers. No algorithm deciding who sees you when.
The name comes from yaji (यजि) — one who shows up and offers. And from the Chinese yaji (雅集), the ancient gathering of scholars and artists who came together not to broadcast, but to think alongside each other. Yajigo is that instinct, embedded in a single line of code.
You host it yourself, or we host it for you. Either way, what you're offering visitors is something rarer than content: your actual time and attention, held open for whoever arrives.
Community without presence is just an archive. Yajigo is the door, left ajar.