
Notes
What is Entroparc?
Entroparc is a small founder-led product studio.
Entroparc is a small founder-led product studio. We build mostly digital products for now. We experiment, test things in the real world, and share the products, lessons, process notes, and surprises. This feels important now because AI building tools have changed what a small studio can try. Entroparc is learning in that same field.
The studio had an identity crisis for a long time. I tried words like venture studio, lab, hacking, product building, and product development, but none of them carried the whole idea. Entroparc overlaps with those terms, but it feels more personal and experimental. Now the shape is clearer, and we need a simple public explanation of what we are building, why the products belong together, and what we will share. Good timing, they just landed by themselves.
The name Entroparc means Entropy + Arc. Entropy is the messy starting point: scattered ideas, unclear problems, half-built tools, and too many possible directions. The arc is the work of turning that mess into something meaningful and useful for people.
The studio works in an experimental way. One thread is a simple idea: anything that improves through repetition can often be measured, studied, and improved. Threom is one example because it is built around IELTS speaking practice. Another thread starts from problems that feel harder than they should be.
The products look unrelated at first. Some came from firsthand problems. Threom connects to my own experience preparing for IELTS. Other ideas came from research, market scans, and an attempt to build a repeatable way of finding product ideas. I did not want to sit and write ideas from nowhere. From the inside, they are close: each one starts with a messy workflow and tries to make it clearer, more useful, and better designed.
Subtrack helps YouTube creators see which videos actually bring subscribers, not only views. Threom helps IELTS learners practice speaking and get feedback without waiting for a tutor every time. LVL helps people work with PDFs and source documents, including cited answers and document comparison. Siftor helps organize creator collaboration work.
What connects the products is the way they are chosen and built. They come from personal experience, research, and a practical filter for problems that may still have room for a focused product. I look for areas where the product can be useful beyond a generic AI feature, where quality and detail still matter, and where there is room to experiment. They are also connected by taste. I did not come from a traditional product-design background, so I study strong products and try to bring more care, clarity, and quality into the work.
I keep fixing articles and posts, never enough, and I usually overthink public posts. Not my cup of tea. So I needed a semi-automatic system that would nudge me, take some processes off my shoulders, and also have something to compound with a proper cadence rather than random posting here and there. I decided I will be doing Entroparc for a long time, not a short-term gig. Entromedia is the media system around that work. Its job is to turn what we build into articles, scripts, posts, and videos. It exists because building alone is not enough. If the useful parts never become clear, the work stays private even when it could help someone else.
Some things should stay private. At the same time, Entroparc should be transparent where the public version is useful. We want to share knowledge and make collaboration easier, but we do not want to waste anyone's time with raw, half-broken, or undigested material. We also will not pretend that every experiment is a finished product.
I would not call it pure work in public, because I am still learning what that should mean here, and time is limited. The tone should feel like a friend over coffee talking about what is happening in the workshop: open enough to invite people in, but processed enough to respect their time. If a tool, decision, or test can help another builder, creator, learner, or small team think more clearly, it belongs in the public channel.
People should expect practical updates: what we built, what changed, what worked, what failed, and what we learned from it. Some updates will become articles. Some will become videos. Some will stay as small notes.
So this is Entroparc: a place for building useful tools, learning from the work, and sharing the parts that make the next useful thing easier to understand.
