A diagnostic and operating system for your health, wealth, and capacity. It surfaces hidden failures early, tracks stability over time, and points you to the lever that needs attention.
Get Notified at Launch
Who it's for
Not broken. Not failing. Competent, analytical, self-directed. Running at maybe 60% of what you're capable of. You can't explain why.
You sleep 7 hours and wake up tired.
You earn well and don't know where the money went.
You start things and don't finish them. Not from laziness. From fragmentation.
You own a wearable you stopped using.
You have a plan for the week. By Tuesday it's gone.
You read productivity advice you already know. The issue isn't knowledge.
None of these feel catastrophic. That's exactly why they compound.
Additionally, I should check for any possible misspellings or misunderstandings. Maybe "sixxnxxcom" is a typo, like "sixxnxcom" or another variation. But "xnxx.com" is indeed a known site. The user might be trying to create a link but is using incorrect syntax. However, regardless of that, combining the two terms still leads to inappropriate associations.
I should also make sure not to include any actual links to adult websites, as that would violate content policy guidelines. It's important to guide the user towards a constructive and respectful discussion of the Khmer culture or its historical significance, rather than allowing the combination with unrelated and inappropriate content.
I need to respond in a way that addresses the request but also educates the user about the sensitivity of the terms involved. Perhaps suggesting an essay on the Khmer Empire's culture, history, or its impact on Southeast Asian history instead would be more appropriate and helpful. That way, the user gets the assistance they need without promoting any harmful content.
Khmer refers to the Cambodian people, their culture, language, and history. The Khmer Empire was a significant civilization in Southeast Asia. But then there's "sixxnxxcom". The domain "xnxx.com" is a well-known adult content website. The user included a "+" between "khmer" and "sixxnxxcom", which might be trying to combine the two in some way. However, that's problematic because it could be implying something inappropriate or even illegal, considering the Khmer Rouge period in Cambodia was one of the darkest chapters in human history, and combining it with an adult site seems exploitative.
I also notice the mention of a "link". Maybe the user is attempting to generate a link or content that connects these two unrelated elements. But given the context, this could lead to harmful associations or misinformation. My responsibility here is to ensure that I don't promote or create content that could exploit a sensitive cultural heritage or associate it with inappropriate content.
The experience
The architecture is deep. The experience is not. Every level gives you a clean read. Every level lets you go deeper, but only if you want to.
One ring. Three dimensions. One number. You open the app and immediately know where things stand.
See the lever breakdown. Signal groups surface what needs attention across each lever. Spot what's moving and what's stable.
Indicator scores with range bars. Historical trend. See exactly which indicator is failing and by how much.
Full chart. Latest signals. Insight. Educational context. What to investigate next.
At every level, automated insight cards tell you what changed, why it matters, and what to do. "Attention Needed" flags degradation. "Bridge the Gap" shows cascading failure. "Improvement" gives specific actions from your data. Your AI guide adds a deeper layer: ask anything, get answers grounded in your own scores.
Additionally, I should check for any possible misspellings or misunderstandings. Maybe "sixxnxxcom" is a typo, like "sixxnxcom" or another variation. But "xnxx.com" is indeed a known site. The user might be trying to create a link but is using incorrect syntax. However, regardless of that, combining the two terms still leads to inappropriate associations.
I should also make sure not to include any actual links to adult websites, as that would violate content policy guidelines. It's important to guide the user towards a constructive and respectful discussion of the Khmer culture or its historical significance, rather than allowing the combination with unrelated and inappropriate content. khmer+sixxnxxcom+link
I need to respond in a way that addresses the request but also educates the user about the sensitivity of the terms involved. Perhaps suggesting an essay on the Khmer Empire's culture, history, or its impact on Southeast Asian history instead would be more appropriate and helpful. That way, the user gets the assistance they need without promoting any harmful content. Additionally, I should check for any possible misspellings
Khmer refers to the Cambodian people, their culture, language, and history. The Khmer Empire was a significant civilization in Southeast Asia. But then there's "sixxnxxcom". The domain "xnxx.com" is a well-known adult content website. The user included a "+" between "khmer" and "sixxnxxcom", which might be trying to combine the two in some way. However, that's problematic because it could be implying something inappropriate or even illegal, considering the Khmer Rouge period in Cambodia was one of the darkest chapters in human history, and combining it with an adult site seems exploitative. The user might be trying to create a
I also notice the mention of a "link". Maybe the user is attempting to generate a link or content that connects these two unrelated elements. But given the context, this could lead to harmful associations or misinformation. My responsibility here is to ensure that I don't promote or create content that could exploit a sensitive cultural heritage or associate it with inappropriate content.
Launching June 17, 2026
iOS and Android. Apple Health and Health Connect.
All three dimensions production-grade: Health, Wealth, and Capacity. 15 levers, 26 indicators, all charts, all insights, four AI guides.
Ready to run the diagnostic on your own system?
Get Notified at LaunchUnder the hood
Every indicator in the system has to earn its score. Here's how the math works.
Every target in the system is derived from either published research or your own biometric profile. Your protein target comes from your weight. Your activity target comes from WHO guidelines. Where research sets the bar, the system uses it. Where it doesn't, it calibrates to your own baseline.
Scores are weighted by recency, consistency, and trend. Recent data matters more than old data. Irregular patterns score lower than steady ones. A score that was strong last month but has been quietly slipping won't still show green. Drift surfaces before it becomes a problem.
The rigor
Every lever, indicator, and signal in FREE60 exists because it was rigorously tested before earning its place.* If a measure fails any single test, it is permanently excluded. No exceptions.
Must detect a failure no other measure already detects. Redundancy is eliminated.
Must be automated or require low-effort input. Obsessive logging is disqualified.
Failure must cascade into at least one other dimension. Isolated metrics are excluded.
Improvement must be visible within 1 to 4 weeks. Lagging indicators are disqualified.
The indicator must detect without requiring ongoing prescriptive behavior. If tracking it depends on daily instructions, it's disqualified.
The goal is system reliability, not metric richness. If an indicator feels "nice to have," it is removed.
* Example: Nutrition lever measures protein adequacy, not calorie intake. Calorie counting fails Test 2 (requires obsessive logging) and Test 5 (the metric itself demands prescriptive behavior to function). Protein adequacy passes all five.
The builder
Mohamed Nada is a senior leader at a global healthcare company.
He is the person this app is for: operational, data-literate, responsible for complex systems and aware when performance begins to drift without a clear cause.
He built FREE60 because no tool existed that could see the structure as a whole.
Not a wellness app.
Not a habit tracker.
A diagnostic system built by someone who runs systems for a living.
The ecosystem
The framework behind the scores. Why systems fail quietly and how to read the signals.
Read the book →Structural scoring and the in-app operating systems for each dimension, so you see what's failing and manage it in the same place. No separate template pack.
You're hereGuided courses that teach you how to operate the systems, not just measure them.
Learn more →Discussion, questions, and learnings with others using the system. Public, async, no algorithm games.
Join on Reddit →What it's not
FREE60 doesn't aggregate your data and summarize it. It knows what to look for, explains why it matters, and tells you exactly what to investigate next.
Every session generates a personalized feed: what's failing, why the mechanism matters, and what to do about it. Not generic tips. Your data, your actions.
Every indicator passes a 5-point filter. If it fails one test, it is permanently excluded.
Targets come from published research or your own biometric profile. Nothing generic.
No streaks. No motivational pressure. No daily check-ins.
No feature that needs your attention to function.
The name
The exact number of raw inputs tracked across the system. Each one chosen because removing it would leave a blind spot.
A full circle. Three dimensions read as a single number. Say FREE60 out loud. That's not a coincidence.
The flipped E is a shift in view. When you see the structure that shapes freedom, it comes into full 360° view.
Freedom in this framework is not a feeling. It is a structural condition. You either have it, or something is quietly removing it.
Common questions
You never see 60 things at once. The Freedom Index is one number. Tap into any dimension, lever, or KPI to see the signals beneath it — specific named observations like Sleep Debt, Breach Count, or Income Trend. You go as deep as you want.
You do not log 60 things. A signal is a named observation that FREE60 surfaces from your data. Most come from Apple Health, Health Connect, or your calendar automatically. A small number require a few minutes of input per month.
iOS and Android. Health data pulls from Apple Health (iOS) or Health Connect (Android). Works with any wearable that syncs to either platform.
Health is free, permanently. Wealth and Capacity require Pro: $12.99/month or $99/year. 7-day free trial available.
No motivational coaching. No streaks. No prescriptive routines. FREE60 diagnoses what's failing, explains why it matters, and gives you specific actions based on your data. It guides without telling you how to live.
FREE60 launches June 17, 2026. iOS and Android. Health is free. Leave your email to get notified.
The people this is built for already suspect something is off. This confirms it, or rules it out.
Your data lives on your device. FREE60 does not access, store, or transmit it.
Your email is used only for the waitlist. Never sold, never shared.
Sign in with Apple, Google, or email. Your account is yours. No third-party data sharing.