Tech Beyond the Browser
Most software is judged by how it looks in a tab. The interesting question is what happens after it leaves one.
Not hype. Not another list of tools. We focus on software that changes how people work, build, sell, support, learn, and operate in the real world.
Most software is judged by how it looks in a tab. The interesting question is what happens after it leaves one.
The difference between a subscription people tolerate and one that quietly reorganizes how a team operates.
Most software is judged by how it looks in a tab. The interesting question is what happens after it leaves one.
The difference between a subscription people tolerate and one that quietly reorganizes how a team operates.
Once the demo dopamine fades, most AI products are judged by a boring question: did the work get done faster and correctly?
Developer tools are unusual: the users can measure the value themselves. That makes the honest ones easy to spot.
A lot of the industry builds tools for people who build tools. The more interesting startups point their software at the physical, unglamorous world.
SaaS products judged by the work they actually change — not their pricing page or feature list.
Browse →02IDEs, CLIs, CI, and infrastructure — how they save real time for the people who ship.
Browse →03AI products measured by operational value: what they do once the novelty wears off.
Browse →04Startups solving real problems for real users — instead of building more software for software people.
Browse →05The quiet ways software reshapes teams, processes, and the daily shape of a job.
Browse →06How internet products change the way we talk, learn, buy, and spend our attention.
Browse →