D.air connects contributors with open-source projects that help real people—accessibility tools, disaster relief, community resources.
Find a project that resonates, show you're serious, and build something meaningful.
A volunteer-run collective where anyone can contribute to accessibility tools, disaster relief systems, community resources, and more. Your skills + our projects = real impact.
"Alone we can do so little; together we can do so much."
Code, design, writing, testing, ideas—every contribution matters. Projects thrive when diverse people bring their unique skills to the table.
All projects are public. To join a team, submit a thoughtful request—maintainers want to see you're engaged and ready to contribute.
One person can start a project. A community can change the world. We're stronger when we build alongside each other.
D.air is for people who want to contribute meaningfully. No fancy credentials—just genuine interest and the follow-through to back it up.
We're designers, engineers, students, and professionals from all over the world. Different backgrounds, different skill levels—united by the drive to build things that actually help people.
Because finding safety shouldn't require a smartphone
SMS-based resource locator for displaced persons. Works on any phone, any network. Currently deployed across 12 camps.
The web should work for everyone
Open-source screen reader built by blind developers, for blind users. No subscriptions, no telemetry, no excuses.
Connecting surplus to need
Hyperlocal food redistribution network. Restaurants, grocers, and mutual aid groups sharing what would otherwise go to waste.
Have a project idea that could help people?
We provide infrastructure, mentorship, and a community of builders.
Every project here started with someone who saw a problem and decided to do something about it. Some are finished. Some are just beginning. All are open.
Real-time disaster response coordination
Peer tutoring for underserved communities
Carbon-aware navigation for daily commutes
Medication tracking for elderly care