Orrery is a pocket-sized window on the universe — a 64×32 LED matrix that lives on your desk and quietly paints the cosmos in real time.
Every few seconds it shifts: the sky outside your window, rendered as weather today and forecast tomorrow. The phase of the moon tonight, glowing against drifting clouds. A close-passing asteroid and how near it skimmed. The planet itself, lit where the sun falls, freckled with wildfires and storms pulled straight from NASA's live feeds. And once a day, whatever image NASA has chosen as the Astronomy Picture of the Day — nebulae, galaxies, Martian dunes — dithered down to fit in the palm of your hand.
Press 📻 Broadcast and the dashboard speaks: a fresh daily briefing from the solar system, written by GPT-4o and read aloud, its voice sketched as a live spectrum across the panel.
Everything below is a pixel-accurate preview of the physical device. Tap any scene to jump, drag the time-of-day slider to watch the light shift from amber dawn to indigo midnight.