Comments, support and feedback
- Nitiksh Kumar3 months agoMaker
Hey everyone, I’ve been following the shift in software development for the last decade. We went from "Download this .exe" to "Everything lives in the browser." SaaS became the standard, and we stopped owning software—we just rented access to it via our internet connection. But recently, I’ve noticed a shift back. People are getting tired of subscription fatigue and the inability to work when the Wi-Fi drops. I recently built a project called TypeMaster (https://typemaster.ntxm.org/). It started as a purely web-based typing tutor to help people master touch typing with story-based learning. But the number one request I got wasn't for more stories or better analytics—it was: “Can I download this?” It made me realize that for utility software—whether it's a free typing tutor, a code editor, or a note-taking app—users still crave that native, offline reliability. They want a full free typing software download that sits on their Windows 10 or Windows 11 desktop, not just a browser tab that consumes RAM and requires a constant ping. So, I built an offline installer for it. The response was interesting: users felt more "ownership" over their progress when the app was installed locally. I’m curious to hear your thoughts: When looking for tools (productivity, learning, etc.), do you actively search for a downloadable version (offline), or are you 100% happy with browser-based tools? Is "Offline Capability" a feature you prioritize in 2025? If you want to critique the implementation, you can check the download structure here: https://typemaster.ntxm.org/download. I’d love some feedback from this community on the balance between a PWA (Progressive Web App) vs. a dedicated MSI installer.
About this launch
TypeMaster was launched by Nitiksh Kumar in January 6th 2026.
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