I've been playing golf since I was 10. That's over four decades of rounds — and in all those years, one thing has never changed: the way we keep score. The same little cardboard card. The same tiny pencil that breaks if you breathe on it. The same routine, essentially unchanged since the 1800s.
Phone apps tried to fix it. They made it worse. Pull it out every hole. Squint in the sun. Get a notification mid-backswing. Drop it on the cart path. Golf became something you do at a course while managing your phone — instead of, you know, playing golf.
StrokeInk is the missing link. Between cardboard and chaos. Between paper and phone. Between just playing the round and actually understanding it afterward.
Simple like paper. Smart like software. Invisible like both should be. Built by golfers who've spent forty years on the course — not by a startup full of MBAs who play once a year at the company outing.