> We need to eat. You need to finish things. That's capitalism, baby. Also, you value things you pay for (unlike those 17 free apps you downloaded and never opened).
Huh, I think I just found some new copy text for the SAAS I'm building!
Some day I want it explained to me why it's impossible to put controls on a computer. Computers follow symbolic mathematical rules, so, "you're only allowed to run this app for 30 minutes" seems like a really easy command to follow. But you cannot buy software that actually, reliably causes this to occur at any cost on any device.
It seems like there are three hard things in computer science: cache invalidation, naming things, and forbidding things.
The kind of people who are easily distracted like this are the kind of people that will be very unlikely to configure an application filter for each task. What would be immensely more useful would be a (local) AI that periodically looks at your screen, uses context clues to figure out what you're doing, and first uses social pressure to get you on track, and eventually just closes it if you keep getting distracted.
Putting the ones on the user to manage this is just adding one additional thing that requires executive function.
I made a web extension like this a while back. Called Prod, it’s a similar idea but in the browser. Feel free to use it it’s free and there are no plans to change it. Been around for years.
Cool addiction blocker product. Also ties into a strange concept whereby something has value because you pay for it as opposed to the other way around. This idea probably generalises to any kind of self help app that people normally get for free and ignore. If you can provide enough polish to justify a luxury price tag people may invest!
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[ 3.8 ms ] story [ 45.6 ms ] thread> We need to eat. You need to finish things. That's capitalism, baby. Also, you value things you pay for (unlike those 17 free apps you downloaded and never opened).
Huh, I think I just found some new copy text for the SAAS I'm building!
>Several users have tried. None have succeeded.
But then
>What browsers does Kiki support?
>KIKI supports Chrome and Safari. Other browsers can confuse it. Stick to those two.
the more I see that - the less I trust
(X) Doubt
that's what I usually do. :)
It seems like there are three hard things in computer science: cache invalidation, naming things, and forbidding things.
Putting the ones on the user to manage this is just adding one additional thing that requires executive function.
https://selfcontrolapp.com/
If I have to download a brand-new browser just to use this app, what's stopping me from switching back to Firefox to evade the blocks?
prodtodolist.com if you’re interested