Everything we do starts with this question.
Why should audiowriter exist? Why should anyone care to use it? Why is privacy so important to us?
Eventually, the "why" led us here.
We live in a time where tech needs you to look at your screen with ads and sell your data. That's the way it is. Why do bootstrapping tools have social feeds? Why do note-taking apps need to be connected to Facebook? Why were all the tools we considered for audiowriter built on the same old tech stack?
Why improve an obviously asked question, why not? Why not have a different way to save what we care about? Why not try to create a better way? Why not make it simple?
There was a time when tech really made your tools feel good. The apps we used were delightful. Then they all took a turn for the worse. It was a race to make everything as addictive as possible. We must love our tools, engage them, share them.
Could we reclaim the magic of those early days? Could we build something that helps you do what you need to do rather than taking from us something designed not in a way that forces us toward advertising with our tools but rather something that we are here to use, whenever you need.
There's a magic age don't know about privacy issues. But the idea of starting from scratch. Not only because humanity evolves around fresh ideas, but it's also important to question yourself, to be more conscious, more mindful of our digital lives and collect memories of the things you save and collect.
Digital clutter and information fatigue affect our real minds, whether we are aware of it or not. We want you to have control over what to save and remember, in a natural right of mind.
We built audiowriter for ideas and notes. For people who will keep doing their thing and simply want a place to collect and remember what they care about.
Because AudioWriter is a tool meant to help you achieve something bigger. To help you create, to be yourself, to give you more time to do everything and everything changes the tool too.