I grew up watching guards in Philippine subdivisions manually write visitor names in a logbook — same logbook for years, water-damaged, illegible. Residents would call the guardhouse to let their guests in. HOAs would post announcements on tarpaulin. Maintenance requests went nowhere.
Qmunidad started as a personal project to fix that. One developer, one codebase, solving real problems in Philippine residential communities.
The name comes from komunidad — the Filipino word for community. Every module is named the same way: LoQate, BisitaQ, BahayQ — Filipino words with a Q, because community management should feel local, not imported.
This is not a VC-backed startup. There is no sales team. No support department. Just a developer who cares about getting this right — and who answers support emails himself.
Full-stack developer building Qmunidad solo. Every line of code, every design decision, every feature — one person responsible.