• kjellsbells 3 hours 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 "LaTeX is hard".

    Optimize for that very strongly, or else you'll be a solid 60% of everything (after years of effort...) but you won't ever get the critical mass of switchers. Whereas being 95% for one thing almost guarantees you'll get the people whose problem you solve thoroughly.

    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.

    https://sgurungp.github.io/2024/08/14/LaTeX-for-Word-users-p...

    • tyushk 3 hours ago

      I see the idea, but you're competing with Microsoft Word and Overleaf for non-techies, and LaTeX/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's template. Techies probably don't want a cloud only service for a mostly solved problem. I don't see the value as a techie, and I don't see why I wouldn't just use my University's Word template from a non-techies view.

      • cheesekunator a minute ago

        And you'll always have a professor say, "Send me the word document for review", then they will provide inline feedback and return the file back to you. In these cases the technology isn't the constraint, the existing process from the institution is.

      • teleforce an hour ago

        Previous HN post in 2024 (30 comments):

        Show HN: MonsterWriter – Write a thesis, post, or organize notes:

        https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=40112169

        • p3p2o 3 hours ago

          This kind of service could be very useful since documents can be output in different formats or reformatted simply. I'm searching for a replacement for Word that can handle custom header levels/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/numberings and can handle collaborative work in a simpler format. This might be the ticket.

          • kapone an hour ago

            If you cannot even describe your “platform” without proper grammar…especially one that’s supposed to be about “writing”…

            :shrug:

            • yummypaint 4 hours ago

              This could be useful for undergrads getting their feet wet with LaTeX and the world of publishing. However, I'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.

              In fact it isn'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.

              • murphyslab 3 hours 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.

                As you noted, one needs a lot of fine tuning to meet publication rules & guidelines. Compared to a local LaTeX editor or Overleaf, this looks too generic to meet the needs I'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.

                • sureglymop 23 minutes ago

                  I would suggest Typst nowadays. Much easier to get into imo. Unfortunately though it doesn't have backwards compatibility for LaTeXs math notation.

              • yardshop 3 hours ago

                Third sentence needs some correction:

                "MonsterWriter assists students write exceptional academic papers"

                should be

                "MonsterWriter assists students to write exceptional academic papers"

                or "helps students write..."

                • brudgers 7 hours ago

                  I appreciate the idea.

                  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.

                  So the risk of all a student'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.

                  • spankalee 4 hours ago

                    This is an argument against any new software for students.

                    • dickiedyce 4 hours 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.

                      • superxpro12 4 hours 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.

                      • qwertytyyuu 39 minutes ago

                        It goes for software like this and notion, but fully offline stuff like obsidian is fine

                    • exe34 2 hours ago

                      There'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.

                      • echelon_musk 4 hours ago

                        s/build/built/