Askube is an indie project — built, shipped, and supported by one person. No investors, no growth department, no roadmap written by committee. Just the publishing tool I wanted to exist.
I'm Prithvi — a software engineer by trade. For a long time I watched the creators, content marketers, and podcasters around me lose entire evenings to the same chore: turning one good video into a LinkedIn post, a thread, a newsletter, and a handful of shorts — by hand, one tab at a time, in a voice that never quite sounded like them.
I didn't want another AI dashboard with forty buttons. I wanted one URL bar, one brand voice I'd set up once, and outputs I'd actually publish without rewriting. So I built it — for myself first, then for the people who kept asking to borrow it.
Askube is still just me, and that's on purpose. It means every email you send is read by the person who wrote the code, and every feature exists because it removed a step — not because a quarterly plan demanded it. I'm not building a startup to flip. I'm building the publishing tool I wish I'd had.
No support queue staffed by people who've never used the product. No feature shipped to satisfy a board deck. When you write in, you reach the one person who builds and runs all of it.
An AI tool that writes like every other AI tool is just a slower search box. The brand voice you set once is the thing I work hardest to protect.
I don't ship a feature unless it removes a step. The shortest path between “new video” and “posts ready to publish” is the only thing I benchmark against.
Askube doesn't spam your inbox or herd you into a community. It does the work and gets out of the way. You'll hear from me when you upload, and when I ship something worth knowing about.