I believe in a world where communication flows effortlessly, where words can heal, connect, and inspire. But let’s face it, not all barriers are visible. They appear in misunderstandings, cultural divides, and language struggles.
Even the toughest walls can crack, and in those cracks, there’s a chance for empathy to grow and real connections to form. Whether it’s walls between people, cultures, or even borders between nations, I believe we’re better when we work to break them down instead of building them higher.
If your organization is focused on breaking barriers, helping people express themselves, fostering inclusion, or bridging divides, we would love to partner with you. We’re offering Smart Keys for free to organizations and their communities to make communication easier, smoother, and more inclusive.
Maybe not directly, but ask what days of the week they feel most productive. For me, Mondays were the worst. I used to feel that Sunday evening dread creeping in, knowing what Monday had in store: endless meetings, tough decisions, and a drained feeling by day’s end. 🥶 And guess what? Most of the team felt the same way.
So, I ran an experiment to change my Mondays, and it worked wonders. Not just for Mondays, but for my Sunday evenings too.
Here’s what I did:
No meetings on Mondays: Blocked off the entire day for “Flow Mode.”
Moved sprint planning to Tuesdays: This helps the team ease into the week and avoids the temptation to work over the weekend. Plus, one third of all sick days happen on Mondays, so attendance issues are less disruptive.
The dev, support, and mkt teams can use Mondays to solve possible issues generated during the weekend.
Made Mondays a day for reflection and solving issues: Use the day to gather insights from the weekend, summarize last week’s learnings, and prepare for informed decisions.
Paul Graham says it best: “Don’t your spirits rise at the thought of having an entire day free to work, with no appointments at all? Well, that means your spirits are correspondingly depressed when you don’t.”
My Sunday nights used to be filled with anxiety, but now I look forward to them because my Mondays are mine.
Am I moving my worst day from Monday to Tuesday? 🤷♀️
Well, yesterday was Monday and I felt super productive. Today is Tuesday, and I’m here super excited about sharing this with you and eager to get things done.
As a non-native speaker, I relied heavily on Grammarly for years. I couldn’t write a simple text without its proofreading capabilities. Recently, though, I found myself turning to ChatGPT with a simple prompt: “proofread this.” It did a much better job, but the constant copy-pasting was a hassle. I tried various AI keyboards, but most were just Grammarly copycats, constantly nudging me about comma placements or suggesting rewrites because my message wasn’t clear. All I wanted was a tool that would handle this for me effortlessly.
I even started counting the clicks it took to proofread a simple text, 21 clicks to be exact. Still, the result felt off, often using Portuguese text structures that didn’t quite fit.
So, about two months ago, I decided to experiment with iOS Keyboard Extensions to build my own solution. I just wanted a single button on top of my keyboard to proofread my text. One click and bam, done. The feature itself was simple to build, the real challenge was creating a good keyboard. When you build a keyboard extension on iOS, you have to design the entire keyboard. That’s when I discovered KeyboardKit, an open-source project by Daniel Saidi, that saved me months of development.
But in this space, there aren’t many competitive barriers to building keyboard apps, there are hundreds, if not thousands, of these apps available. Only a few make real money, earning millions per month, while the rest flood the App Store. I knew that without a hefty marketing budget, this would be a fun personal experiment that might lead to something else down the line.
I was happy with my MVP, to me was better than Grammarly already, so I started adding more features: keys that could convert a text to a casual tone, shortening it, generating pickup lines, even creating a “speak like a tech mogul” key. 🤦, I went overboard and ended up with over 150 new keys on my keyboard.
Last week, I launched it to some close friends and ESL students to get their feedback. The response was full of amazing ideas, but the keyboard experience and autocorrection still lag behind the native iOS keyboard.
Then, I had a thought: when Apple inevitably launches their LLM, they’ll likely integrate a native writing tool. And when they do, it’s going to be a game changer, at least for someone like me. Fast forward, and here we are: iOS 18 will include a native proofreading tool across both desktop and mobile. One click, and bam, your text is proofread everywhere without any hassle.
And that’s just one of the new features in iOS 18. If you’re eager to explore Apple Intelligence and other new tools, download the iOS 18 beta.
But if you want to give Smart Keys a try, the second-best writing tool 🥸, download it here: https://smartkeys.so/
That’s it, I’m left wondering, with barriers to entry lower than ever, what will separate leaders from the pack in AI tech?