12 comments

  • sgt 56 minutes ago
    Rather stick with Pages when it comes to that. Pages has certainly gone through some waves of where maybe some features were missing or something wasn't ideal, but 10 years later it's so fast and responsive, it makes any other Office suite behave like an old beat up horse.

    You kinda have to try out Pages and Keynote etc to really understand why they are superior. Maybe not in features, but the speed at which you can put things in, tweak things, move stuff around and so on.

    At least that's my personal opinion on this. I don't use these apps every day though, as I'm primarily a programmer.

  • ilumanty 1 hour ago
    The vibe coded website suggests that this is a vibe coded tool. Is it though?
    • mariopt 56 minutes ago
      Yep, the website looks vibecoded.

      Quite suprised this managed to be on HN first page with a fresh account.

    • paul7986 1 hour ago
      Indeed there's probably thousands of slop apps out there now with millions to follow. In time making pricing and profit go to zero.
      • fantasizr 55 minutes ago
        there's so many apps, I'm sorta where murakami was to filter out novels he'd consider reading. A good app needs to be validated through the sands of time before I consider replacing something that already exists on my machine (and was probably free).
      • 00deadbeef 59 minutes ago
        One good thing to come of vibecoding is native apps are less effort, so hopefully there will be more alternatives to Electron crap apps.
  • cykros 1 hour ago
    So it's like OpenOffice or LibreOffice or Abiword but it costs money?
    • kubb 1 hour ago
      And it's native cocoa I guess.
    • bigyabai 59 minutes ago
      It costs money and is vibe coded. The worst of both worlds!
  • egypturnash 54 minutes ago
    "Word wants a subscription. Pages is a lot of app. TextEdit tops out at bold and italic."

    No it doesn't? format>font has bold, italic, underline, outline, super/subscript, and more?

    It used to have strikethru too, annoyingly now you have to open the fonts window and access it through a dropdown in there instead of a single hotkey. Notes still has a strikethru menu item but the ⌘k hotkey got stolen for "make hyperlink".

  • rubslopes 1 hour ago
    If it's really fully compatible with docx files, I'm very interested in this. No matter the advances Apple makes with the M chips, Office apps are always slow to open. Not to mention the obligatory background services.
    • wky 1 hour ago
      From the comparison image it looks like the goal is functional compatibility, not render compatibility. The table borders change and the layout changes.
    • rhubarbtree 50 minutes ago
      If it’s vibe coded, it’ll use one of the OSS libraries for importing word, so the answer is no it isn’t compatible and the website is misleading slop.
  • Reubend 1 hour ago
    I've never understood the appeal of minimal writing apps. They've got beautiful UIs, but I could theoretically do everything here on a normal writing app, couldn't I?
  • jonplackett 1 hour ago
    Hey thanks for sharing. This looks great.

    How do you see this positioned VS just using Pages? Why did you decide to make this instead?

    Also is there an iPhone version that syncs with it or is it Mac only?

    • helloplanets 1 hour ago
      From the page:

      > Pages is a lot of app. TextEdit tops out at bold and italic. Others are too single-minded.

      > So I built my own. It does what I need, nothing I don’t, and it never asks me to log in.

  • rambambram 1 hour ago
    I stick with Pluma and gedit on Linux, but the landing page is clear and goodlooking!
  • matricaria 1 hour ago
    I paid about 5€ for a Microsoft Office key.
  • phyzix5761 1 hour ago
    Source?
  • etchalon 1 hour ago
    I mean Pages is free.
  • allurahqdev 1 hour ago
    [dead]