Let $\mathcal{A}$ be a $*$-algebra with unit $1_{\mathcal{A}}$. As in the $\mathrm{C}^*$-setting, a projection is an element $p\in\mathcal{A}$ such that $p=p^2=p^*$. A partition of unity is a finite set of projections $\{p_i\}_{i=1}^N\subset \mathcal{A}$ such that: $$\sum_{i=1}^N p_i=1_{\mathcal{A}}.$$
Is there an example of a partition of unity such that the projections are not pairwise-orthogonal?
If $\mathcal{A}$ is a $\mathrm{C}^*$-algebra (or presumably, if there exists a *-representation $\pi(\mathcal{A})\subset B(\mathsf{H})$, or something similarly and suitably embedding the partition of unity in a $\mathrm{C}^*$-algebra), then it is well known that the projections in a partition of unity are pairwise-orthogonal. In the theory of quantum permutation groups, there is an approach that uses universal *-algebras generated by various partitions of unity, and because it is believed that the answer to the above question is yes, the orthogonality relations $p_ip_j=\delta_{ij}\,p_i$ are added at that point (where in the universal $\mathrm{C}^*$-algebra approach, such relations are automatic).
I have asked some people for an explicit example/counterexample and thus far nobody knows beyond "person $X$ says there is one".