I’ve always believed simple software is hard.
Not because simple apps are small, but because simple software forces decisions. You have to decide what belongs, what does not, what should be hidden, and what should never exist in the first place.
Adding features is often easier than refusing them. A feature can feel like progress. It gives you something visible to point at. But every feature also adds weight: another button, another state, another decision for the user, another thing to maintain.
The software I like most is simple, usable, useful, and beautiful. Not decorative. Not empty. Not artificially minimal. Just clear about what it is trying to do.
That is the kind of software I want Edliss to make.
Kurkum, for example, is not trying to become a complete cooking platform. It is a recipe app. It should help you save recipes, organise them, and cook from them. The closer it stays to that, the better it becomes.
Simple does not mean unfinished. It means disciplined.