WERK: Soft launch
Dear Reader
After engaging in a two-week coding marathon, sitting in various cafes every evening, I'm somewhat thrilled—no, let's not overdo it—I'm adequately pleased to pull the curtains back on the latest release: WERK. (Yes, this consumed 100% of my time, so excuse the lack of content)
WERK is a multi-editor, it allows you to simultaneously view and manage numerous drafts and notes—all in a single, streamlined workspace.
If the thought of juggling between windows and tabs and alt-tabbing gives you the shivers, WERK might just be the sanity saver you were looking for. It smooths out the crinkles in the fabric of your workflow, especially the editing process. Minimize if not eliminate that frustration.
Check it out
Decoding "WERK"
Why WERK? Because it's literally the essence of what you do—Write, Edit, Rearrange, Keep. A tad obvious, perhaps, but brilliance often lies in simplicity. Does what it says on the tin right?
Why did I make WERK?
My blogging endeavors often resembled assembling a Frankenstein's monster—an outline here, a chunk of thoughts there, slashing some parts, stitching others. The horror. Traditional apps, with their single open note, had me ping-ponging between tabs and files, turning what should be a streamlining process into a lesson in frustration, preventing me from entering flow. And don’t get me started on revisions.
Now, with the power to juggle multiple editors simultaneously, I can dance through revisions without losing my marbles. Draft 1, Draft 2, Draft 3—it's all there in front of me. A single drag-and-drop is all it takes to weave coherence into my chaotic thought process. Working on Draft 4 and need to having to comparing draft 3 with draft 1? Absolutely painful.
Who is WERK for?
If the mere act of editing text doesn't fill you with existential dread, congratulations—WERK might not be your soulmate.
But for rest of us, anyone who needs to edit text or create—bloggers, scriptwriters, perpetual email drafters, students.
Picture it having your notes open, and a digital scratch pad right there to capture your thoughts and ideas.
A favor to ask
If WERK speaks to you, whispers sweet nothings about revolutionizing your workflow, I'm all ears for feedback. Share it, curse it, praise it—just interact with it. For those who fancy staying in the loop or would like to provide feedback sign up for the newsletter. That way I got a way to research out to you.
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All feedback is appreciated, thank you.