Changelog
A friendly, public summary of what's new in AverCare.
A high-level look at recent releases. This is the public, plain-language version; it intentionally leaves out internal ticket numbers and implementation minutiae.
AverCare ships frequently. Build numbers increment with each release to the TestFlight (iOS) and sideload (Android) testing tracks.
Build 44 — June 2026
Stability sweep + a more flexible AverScan. A dozen tester-reported issues across iOS and Android were fixed, and AverScan gained a selectable scan provider.
- Scrolling that behaves. Lists and cards that occasionally fought back — especially over charts and frosted-glass surfaces — now scroll smoothly on both platforms.
- Trustworthy Apple Health data. Fixed a crash when connecting Apple Health, stopped sleep totals from over-counting overlapping samples, and filled in the dashboard stress card for Apple Watch users.
- AverScan, your way. A new scan-provider setting lets AverScan run on-device by default, with the clinical engine as an opt-in — so scanning works today.
- Voice & avatar audio that doesn't overlap. Switching between video and voice no longer stacks multiple voices, and the live transcript follows the conversation.
Build 43 — May 2026
AverScan becomes a real contactless scan. AverScan graduated from a camera-tracking proof-of-concept into a measurement pipeline returning real readings (heart rate, breathing, variability, a stress indicator, and wellness markers), narrated in plain language.
- A time-of-day backdrop on the home screen.
- A friendlier avatar warm-up screen.
- A "Rate AverCare" prompt.
- Full translations across all eight supported languages.
Build 42 — May 2026
Tester-feedback sweep. A second round of fixes against real-device reports.
- Fixed an Apple Health crash on tap.
- The sleep tile now matches what your watch reports.
- The avatar provider toggle reliably sticks.
- Many Android scroll surfaces that ate gestures were unblocked.
- Telemedicine gained a proper "coming soon" experience.
- A new peptide cycling-weeks tracker landed on protocol cards.
Earlier builds
Earlier releases established the foundations: the AI companion and chat history, documents and RAG, the calendar with Google sync, vitals and wearables, the AverWatch surfaces, and the move to a faster, more reliable build pipeline.
Good to know
Notice the rhythm: feature drops alternate with "sweep" releases that fix what testers hit on real devices. Shipping a big feature and then immediately hardening it is a deliberate cadence, not an accident.