Zitro for creators
Make something
you can hold.
Ideas shouldn't live behind glass. Ask, generate, steer — then print the keeper and pin it where you'll actually see it.
Most AI creativity ends in a scroll: you generate ten images, screenshot one, and never see it again. Zitro's creative loop points the other way — out of the screen and into the room.
A sketch for a story. A bar chart that settles a breakfast argument. A real photo of a narwhal with its name underneath. The best one goes to the printer in the corner, and suddenly the idea is a thing: foldable, pinnable, scribble-on-able.
A small creative studio,
with an exit
Draw the idea
"Draw a lighthouse in a thunderstorm." A generated image appears on the little screen — a spark for a sketchbook, a story, a school project.
Stories you steer
Ask for a story, then bend it: "make the dragon scared of being too bright." You're the author; the AI is the pen.
Real photos to riff on
Wikipedia photos of real animals, places, and machines — reference material with a source, not an invention.
Graphs on demand
Wolfram Alpha turns "how much bigger is a blue whale than a bus?" into two bars you can actually see — and print.
Zoom & pan
Get close to the details.
Print the keeper
Send generated or found images to a network printer over AirPrint/WiFi. Fridge gallery, journal page, classroom wall — the answer leaves the screen entirely.
Experimental. Works with some printers.
The answer you can hold
Breakfast. A kid asked Zitro something at bedtime and wanted to keep it, so it went to the little printer in the corner. Now Dad reads the warm slip of paper out loud over cereal — a real, physical thing you can fold, pin to the fridge, scribble on, lose and find again.
The answer has left the screen completely. The printer hums once and goes quiet.
The most calming thing a screen can do is hand you something — and then disappear.
Start a fridge gallery
Zitro costs $25, has no subscription, and turns questions into keepable things.