Welcome to Most Awesome Apps
So This Is the Blog
No corporate fanfare, no mission statement drafted by a branding agency. Just a short intro from me — Uwe — about what Most Awesome Apps is and why it exists.
The short version
Most Awesome Apps is a small, independent software studio. I build productivity tools that help people focus on what actually matters — instead of drowning in tabs, inboxes, and endless to-do lists.
Right now, the lineup is three apps:
- Inbox Focus — a Chrome extension that limits your Gmail view to only the next few emails. No infinite scroll. No anxiety spiral.
- Doing Focus — a macOS app that loads your to-do list and shows you only the next task. One thing at a time.
- SnipFlux — a text snippet tool for Chrome and macOS. Save the phrases, templates, and replies you type over and over, then insert them instantly.
Three tools, one theme: do less context-switching, get more done.
Why I'm building this
I've been making things on the internet for over 20 years. My first money online came when I was about 14 — running browser games in Germany (shoutout to Insel-Monarchie, if anyone remembers that). Since then it's been a long, winding road through ad networks, adtech software, an invoicing SaaS called Invoiceberry, a blogging platform called Bloghandy, a link-building agency called LinkHandy, and honestly hundreds of smaller projects and websites along the way.
Some worked. Plenty didn't. All of them taught me something.
The through-line, looking back, is that I keep coming back to the same problem: the tools we use every day are bloated. Email clients show you everything at once. Task managers have more features than the work they're supposed to organise. Snippet tools want to be entire operating systems.
I wanted something simpler. So I started building it.
What to expect from this blog
This isn't going to be a content mill. I'll write here when I have something worth saying — about the apps, about building software as an independent developer, about productivity without the hustle-culture nonsense, and occasionally about the weird reality of running a tiny software studio in 2026.
If any of that sounds interesting, stick around.
— Uwe