Diagnose
Run the read-only scan or send a folder-size export.
For Mac developers with storage anxiety
SafeDisk AI explains Xcode, Docker, simulator, cache, and old installer bloat in plain English. No file contents uploaded. No blind cleanup.
Build cache. Xcode regenerates it.
Review unused runtimes before removal.
Check active projects before pruning.
The scan prints folder sizes and tool metadata only. It does not inspect file contents, delete files, or change settings.
curl -O https://site-xi-orcin-50.vercel.app/scan.sh && bash scan.sh
Local preview
The preview runs in your browser. For the paid audit, we turn the same scan into a risk-ranked cleanup plan with exact next steps.
Upload `mac-storage-scan-*.txt` to preview likely reclaimable space.
Free first pass
Send the symptom, your Mac model if you know it, and the biggest folders from the local preview. If the scan shows a real cleanup opportunity, we will offer the $29 pilot audit first.
Run the read-only scan or send a folder-size export.
Every item is marked safe, review first, or do not touch.
Follow exact cleanup steps and move files to Trash first.
Proof of work
A sample audit shows the exact format: reclaimable space, safe/review/do-not-touch labels, cleanup order, and commands to run carefully.
$0
Quick read on where your Mac storage is going from the scan output.
Request diagnosis$29
First-customer audit price for users willing to share feedback after delivery.
Claim pilot spot Request invoice$49
Standard risk-ranked report with exact safe cleanup steps.
Book audit$29/yr
Recurring scan reviews, beta access, and developer cleanup rule updates.
Join founding plan$149
Async or live help for Xcode, Docker, caches, and simulators.
Book session$99 pilot
First team scan review and policy draft, with upgrade path to $499/mo.
See team plan Request team invoiceNo. The report only needs paths, sizes, timestamps, and tool categories.
No. Early versions focus on diagnosis and safe instructions. Anything removed should go to Trash first.
Mac users whose space is eaten by Xcode, Docker, simulators, caches, downloads, and old installers.