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Draft (YC S11) Is The Best Word Processor You Can Write With Today (techcrunch.com)
65 points by joshualastdon on March 12, 2013 | hide | past | favorite | 13 comments



The "ask a professional" feature is really cool. A couple of years ago some MIT students came out with a plugin for Word called Soylent [1]. It's the same basic idea, except it's backed by Mechanical Turk instead of a team of professional editors. Turkers suggest small changes and the changes are voted in or out of the final draft by other turkers. Pretty cool stuff.

[1] http://projects.csail.mit.edu/soylent/


That is pretty cool. Thanks for mentioning that project. I'll have to take a deeper look.


Very similar UI to ia Writer [1], which I really enjoy — as someone who easily gets caught up in the minutiae of choosing fonts/sizes/linespacing etc. and thus never starts, you know, actually writing, it’s actually sometimes great to have a program with preset attributes that you can’t tweak. Adding git-like versioning is an awesome addition, I’m looking forward to playing (and maybe writing!) with this.

[1] http://www.iawriter.com/mac/


Very cool. I really like the simple approach and feel there's a _lot_ of mileage in it. However, a couple of questions/points:

1: How do I give my documents a title? 2: Does it support Markdown/how do I link to stuff? 3: The home button doesn't appear to work on an iPad

I may very well have missed something (I haven't published anything yet and didn't search too hard for instructions (it didn't seem to need any)) but thought I'd ask anyway in the hope that they prove useful.


1: If you are editing the document, hover over the home icon, there's a "name this document" link. Or. you can use markdown for titling things.

2. So yes. Markdown is supported.

3. Ah, sorry, the home button uses hover states. I never intended for much iPad use yet, but it seems like it's getting some good use there. I'll fix that soon.


Cool, thanks for the rapid reply. For the record, most of the interface seems to look and work just fine on an iPad. Keep up the good work.


While it does not fit everybody's needs and technical abilities, I have found that writing in markdown with Git version control has proven to be the best way to manage drafts. Other writers can submit pull requests, and when combined with a simple publishing platform like Jekyll it is easy to visualize final results.


Somewhat similar (more polished) to a big ass text file editor I wrote and open sourced a while ago, https://github.com/boyter/BATF http://searchco.de/blog/view/batf-big-arse-text-file which I do admit to using pretty much every day.

I had always suspected that there was a business in creating something like this for the masses but never bothered to implement it myself.


Its very nicely done. love that i can just signup and write. didnt find a demo to try before sign up. which would definitely help.

here is a doc I wrote if some wants to check it out quickly https://draftin.com/documents/5606?token=SWh7LSoED_pnCwLtgJR...


A demo would be nice, agreed. I see your document and it looks nice, but I'd love to play around with the tool before signing up.


I wonder if github could do this pretty simply for gists while using the zen mode enabled on comments: https://github.com/blog/1379-zen-writing-mode


Cool app. The UI reminds me of 750words.com.

However, I was surprised not to receive a welcome email after signing up.


This is very cool, but I use Evernote for this sort of writing.




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