We all know why. It’s AI.
As a developer, I love technology. But as a human, I’ve started to crave writing that has "scars"—writing that has emotion, rhythm, and is actually born from someone’s messy brain, not a polished prompt.
That’s why I built dwrite.me.
An Internet That’s Too Fast My frustration is simple: We live in an age where everything is expected to be instant. Need a 2,000-word article? One click. Need an opinion? Ask a chatbot.
But here’s the problem: If everyone is using AI to write, why should we bother reading each other at all? We aren't exchanging thoughts anymore; we are just swapping machine-processed data. Our way of thinking is becoming lazy. We no longer value the "friction" of struggling to find the right words. Yet, that struggle is exactly where our humanity lives.
The Broken Bridge Between Us I used to read blogs to feel like I was having a conversation with the author. I could feel their anxiety, their excitement, or even their confusion.
Now? That bridge feels broken. AI writing is sterile. There are no surprises, no bold opinions, no "wrong" takes. Everything is safe. I’m worried that if we keep going down this path, we’ll forget how to connect honestly through words. We’re becoming content consumers instead of thought appreciators.
dwrite.me: Back to Basics I built dwrite.me with a very simple concept. In fact, it might be too simple by today's standards.
No AI, Just Friction: I want people to feel the effort of typing again. I want there to be a "clash" between the mind and the keyboard.
Pure Minimalism: No clutter, no distractions. No Copy Paste. It’s just you and your message.
Handcrafted: Every word typed here is a conscious choice made by a human being.
I don’t expect this platform to compete with the giants like Medium or Substack. Not at all. dwrite.me is just a small space for those who still believe that human thought with all its flaws is infinitely more valuable than a text generated by a thousand servers in a matter of seconds.
If you also feel like the internet is getting drowned in automated "noise," maybe we’re on the same frequency.
Check it out at dwrite.me. Let’s start thinking again, one slow word at a time.
Open for collaboration. Let’s build this together if you have the same vision.
evil-olive•12m ago
I get this feeling often when reading "Show HN" posts. including this one.