Vox Stella 2.1.1 is built around a simple goal: make the app feel more dependable when you use it every day.

This is a refinement release rather than a headline-chasing one. The focus was on speed, steadiness, clearer workflow behavior, and tighter logic in the parts of the app people spend the most time in.

If you already use Vox Stella regularly, the difference should feel practical rather than dramatic: faster Astro Clock behavior, steadier long sessions, cleaner transitions between workspaces, and more coherent reasoning in key chart-analysis tools.

Faster and steadier everyday use

One of the biggest priorities in 2.1.1 was everyday performance. Astro Clock was tightened so the live chart state behaves more cleanly during normal use, especially in the heavier workflows that depend on stable chart context.

Startup behavior is better, longer sessions feel steadier, and moving between major workspaces is less awkward at the edges. This is the kind of work users do not always see in a screenshot, but they feel it quickly in real use.

The transit workflow is more coherent

We also continued tightening the transit workflow so exact analysis, scan windows, and ranked prediction views behave in a more aligned way. The goal here was not to add more surface noise. It was to make the system feel less fragmented when you move from one transit view to another.

That work matters because the transit engine is more trustworthy when its outputs relate to each other cleanly. The current pass does not mean the transits work is finished, but it does put the feature in a better place than before.

Astrocartography feels more deliberate

Astrocartography also received another important refinement pass. We improved both the logic and the presentation.

On the logic side, goal models were tightened against curated, source-backed expectations so the feature behaves in a more disciplined way. On the frontend side, the modal flow, city summary, workspace rhythm, and visual grouping were refined so the feature feels more integrated with the wider Astro Clock environment instead of behaving like a bolt-on.

If you use Vox Stella as astrocartography software or as a broader relocation astrology tool, this is one of the best reasons to install the current build.

Frontend polish across the heavier tools

This release also includes smaller but important interface refinements across chart-heavy areas of the app. Tile behavior, loading states, aspect displays, chart controls, and workspace transitions were all cleaned up so the software feels more controlled and less awkward in day-to-day use.

These are not headline features on their own, but together they make the app easier to work with.

Weather and Mundo are still experimental

You may notice early Weather and Mundo surfaces in the current build.

These modules are still in the sketch phase. They are under active refinement and benchmarking, and we do not recommend relying on them yet for serious work. The current direction is promising, but these are not finished production tools.

For now, treat them as experimental tracks rather than stable modules inside the main Vox Stella workflow.

Why this update is worth installing

Vox Stella is not judged only by the number of features it contains. It is judged by whether those features feel usable, coherent, and dependable when someone is actually working.

That is why this release matters. 2.1.1 improves the parts of the app that shape day-to-day trust:

If you are already using Vox Stella, this is a recommended update.

How to update Vox Stella 2.1.1

  1. Update inside the app: Open Vox Stella, go to Settings, then use the Updates section to check for updates.
  2. If the update is not visible yet: Download the latest installer again from the product page.
  3. Install and reopen: Run the installer and open the app normally.
  4. Keep your existing license if needed: Existing users should continue using their current license key unless told otherwise.

FAQ

Who should install Vox Stella 2.1.1?

Anyone already using Vox Stella regularly, especially if you spend time in Astro Clock, transits, or astrocartography. This release is mainly about making daily use feel faster, steadier, and more coherent.

Are Weather and Mundo ready for serious use?

No. They are visible as early experimental tracks, but they remain sketch-phase modules and are not yet recommended for serious use.

Should I use the in-app updater or download again?

Either path is fine. If the in-app updater shows 2.1.1, use that. If it does not appear immediately, downloading the latest installer again from the website is the simplest fallback.