About viallog
What it is
viallog is a personal lab notebook for tracking dosing protocols — compounds, vials, cycles, and the doses themselves. It started as a spreadsheet, outgrew it, and turned into a real app: typed schemas, real database, defense-in-depth access controls, and a domain model that knows the difference between a vial, a compound, and a dose.
Why it exists
Most tracking apps are built for a generic notion of "habits" or "supplements." Self-administered protocols have their own structure: vials get reconstituted, concentrations are computed not declared, injection sites need rotation, cycles have planned start and end dates, and the question "did this protocol actually do anything" deserves real charts. viallog is built around those shapes — whether the route is a syringe, a spray, a dropper, or a pill.
Who runs it
One person, with a small allowlist of friends and collaborators. It is not a venture-backed product and there is no growth team. The roadmap is whatever the owner finds annoying that week.
Not medical advice
viallog is research and logging software. Nothing it stores or displays is medical advice, a diagnosis, or a treatment recommendation. You are responsible for what you log and for any decisions you make based on it.
Getting access
Access is invite-only. If you know the owner, ask them directly. If you don't, this probably isn't the tool you were looking for — but the source-of-truth answer is to reach out.