19 comments

  • kjellsbells2 days ago
    Looks elegant, but make sure to really focus on the specific pain point you think you need to address rather then the generic one of &quot;LaTeX is hard&quot;.<p>Optimize for that very strongly, or else you&#x27;ll be a solid 60% of everything (after years of effort...) but you won&#x27;t ever get the critical mass of switchers. Whereas being 95% for one thing almost guarantees you&#x27;ll get the people whose problem you solve thoroughly.<p>For example, and not to toot my own horn, I wrote some notes for people who have only ever used Word and need just enough LaTeX to understand how to get started[0]. Nothing more.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;sgurungp.github.io&#x2F;2024&#x2F;08&#x2F;14&#x2F;LaTeX-for-Word-users-part-1.html" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;sgurungp.github.io&#x2F;2024&#x2F;08&#x2F;14&#x2F;LaTeX-for-Word-users-p...</a>
  • tyushk2 days ago
    I see the idea, but you&#x27;re competing with Microsoft Word and Overleaf for non-techies, and LaTeX&#x2F;Typst for techies, and that sounds like a losing battle on both fronts. Non-techies want something familiar that they already know how to use, like Word, just with bib and their university&#x27;s template. Techies probably don&#x27;t want a cloud only service for a mostly solved problem. I don&#x27;t see the value as a techie, and I don&#x27;t see why I wouldn&#x27;t just use my University&#x27;s Word template from a non-techies view.
    • cheesekunator2 days ago
      And you&#x27;ll always have a professor say, &quot;Send me the word document for review&quot;, then they will provide inline feedback and return the file back to you. In these cases the technology isn&#x27;t the constraint, the existing process from the institution is.
  • exe342 days ago
    There&#x27;s zero chance in any universe that I would write my thesis in a cloud app. I would prefer pure notepad on windows 3.1 if that were the alternative.
    • alsetmusic11 hours ago
      Without approving of the tone, I can see where you&#x27;re coming from. I only just switched from writing in plain-text to markdown after resisting for years. But I&#x27;m also a *nix nerd, so…
    • southernplaces72 days ago
      My but what a pointlessly shit answer to a polite show and tell.. The reputation of this site for arrogant snark at such things is fully deserved.
      • exe342 days ago
        Thank you for your consideration on this matter.
  • yummypaint2 days ago
    This could be useful for undergrads getting their feet wet with LaTeX and the world of publishing. However, I&#x27;m very skeptical that the options are broad enough to conform to the exacting style guidelines typical of PhD theses. Usually people use a template from their school which already formats everything, autogenerates the table of contents, etc.<p>In fact it isn&#x27;t clear what this system offers over a LaTeX document started from a template and hosted privately on GitHub. The CI pipeline can even be set up to compile the document for the people who want to be able to do everything in a web browser.
    • murphyslab2 days ago
      LaTeX was much easier with Overleaf for my PhD thesis. I still recommend that for friends starting a thesis or a book project. I even used it for recent book project with a friend.<p>As you noted, one needs a lot of fine tuning to meet publication rules &amp; guidelines. Compared to a local LaTeX editor or Overleaf, this looks too generic to meet the needs I&#x27;ve had in the past. Sure, LaTeX can require a lot of tinkering, but PhD students ought be able to figure it out for themselves, whether through documentation, forums, or asking labmates.
      • sureglymop2 days ago
        I would suggest Typst nowadays. Much easier to get into imo. Unfortunately though it doesn&#x27;t have backwards compatibility for LaTeXs math notation.
        • CoreformGreg2 days ago
          I wouldn’t, solely because it’s still in version 0.X - for any long-term, important project (e.g., PhD dissertation) I’d recommend LaTeX due to A) it’s mature and B) many universities provide LaTeX templates.
  • bzmrgonz2 days ago
    I need a platform for legalese. Drafting documents. I do hope AI scribe agent emerges soon tho. &quot;Hey scribus, write me a mark down document and provide links for the usual popular file formats, docx, pdf, Json. Extract metadata from context, format headers and footers and other using statutory instrument standard format. I will dictate content and you research, verify and amplify in my usual writing style&quot;
    • alansaber1 day ago
      This can all be done already, unless i&#x27;m missing something?
  • yardshop2 days ago
    Third sentence needs some correction:<p>&quot;MonsterWriter assists students write exceptional academic papers&quot;<p>should be<p>&quot;MonsterWriter assists students to write exceptional academic papers&quot;<p>or &quot;helps students write...&quot;
  • p3p2o2 days ago
    This kind of service could be very useful since documents can be output in different formats or reformatted simply. I&#x27;m searching for a replacement for Word that can handle custom header levels&#x2F;paragraph numberings in a really simple way. I write a lot of municipal code and would really like to find a tool that provides Word-level headings&#x2F;numberings and can handle collaborative work in a simpler format. This might be the ticket.
  • teleforce2 days ago
    Previous HN post in 2024 (30 comments):<p>Show HN: MonsterWriter – Write a thesis, post, or organize notes:<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=40112169">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=40112169</a>
  • Theodores2 days ago
    Where are the customer testimonials or the samples to play with?<p>There also needs to be an &#x27;about&#x27; page, to explain what the motivation is.<p>Given the AI invasion, isn&#x27;t this a product category that has to either provide AI or have a stance against it?<p>Some work needs to go into how this is marketed and sold. Compare with how a JetBrains IDE is sold, plus what the pricing is.
    • alansaber1 day ago
      For the record, I think you are completely right. I don&#x27;t get this obsession with testimonials though- is it that valuable to have a scrolling list of 20 random logos?
      • Theodores1 day ago
        Showing a laundry list of logos is not testimonials. Testimonials are more like reviews, a different type of social proof where you get a few words about how the product solved the problem and how the company stepped up with customer service when it was needed.<p>In reality, these company logos are always going to be deceptive. If one person at (say) IBM used the software for a minute then why not slap the IBM logo on there? Or, if someone with a Gmail address used the software once, then why not slap the Alphabet logo on there too?
  • kapone2 days ago
    If you cannot even describe your “platform” without proper grammar…especially one that’s supposed to be about “writing”…<p>:shrug:
  • pjdesno2 days ago
    Have you ported the USENIX or ACM paper templates?<p>I dont see how you can claim to be useful for scientific documents if you don’t handle the standard publication templates.
  • bigjobby1 day ago
    Bookmarked. I have a collection of tools now along these lines. Getting ahead without even trying.<p>Top atuff
  • brudgers2 days ago
    I appreciate the idea.<p>But I would advise any and every student against risking their academic work product on a small webservice because the long term economic viability of such services tends to be low.<p>So the risk of all a student&#x27;s work disappearing overnight far outweighs the benefits because the tool is not going to cut a five year program into six months. Good luck.
    • pjdesno2 days ago
      There’s a latex editor for the Mac with real-time typesetting (I forget the name) that I used very early on for fairly high-value paper submissions. (not my dissertation - that’s long in the past)<p>I trusted it because (a) I had a downloaded copy of the app on my machine, and (b) I had the latex files locally, and could go back to emacs if necessary. For the short term, at least, I was insulated from failure of the company.
    • spankalee2 days ago
      This is an argument against any new software for students.
      • dickiedyce2 days ago
        No, this is an argument against any new online-only software for students where your work is being stored in a cloud, and not in an open format locally on hard drives.
        • superxpro122 days ago
          Yeah, i mean, any general backup policy for mission-critical work applies here. 3-2-1 rule, etc. Keeping only 1 copy of something, even on the cloud, is a recipe for disaster. Just ask South Korea how that went for them today.
      • brudgers2 days ago
        My comment expresses my opinion about the specific risks for graduate students considering the likelihood of economic viability of the idea.<p>The risk is a catastrophic event that might derail an academic career beyond recovery.<p>The economic viability assessment is based on the normal costs of doing all the things a company needs to do to stay in business relative to the unit economics, the size of the market, and the availability of alternatives with established track records.<p>If this was a product targeted at freshman students my take would be different. The stakes are much much lower for users; the market is much much bigger; and the norms of academic practice are far more fluid.<p>Grad school is not simply an extended undergrad…at least when theses and dissertations are required. People expect undergraduates to screw up. Part of graduate school is the expectation of maturity.
      • qwertytyyuu2 days ago
        It goes for software like this and notion, but fully offline stuff like obsidian is fine
  • echelon_musk2 days ago
    s&#x2F;build&#x2F;built&#x2F;
  • southernplaces72 days ago
    My two cents:<p>1. Clean up the formatting of the page a bit, it seems a bit choppy along the edges, especially for the visuals (at least as viewed on a laptop).<p>2. Refine the content for the selling points about what it offers. It&#x27;s grammatically awkward and wooden. Neither is a good idea in sales copy, especially in a service designed to help writers.<p>Other than that, looks pretty good, and good luck.
  • throwaway2901 day ago
    previous:<p>- <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=21994655">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=21994655</a> 6 years ago, 27 comments<p>- <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=31491709">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=31491709</a> 3 years ago, 17 comments<p>- <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=40112169">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=40112169</a> 1 year ago, 30 comments<p>- <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=44317242">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=44317242</a> 4 months ago, 50 comments
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  • HNrenewables2 days ago
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