If I’m building a system that needs a full audit trail, what exactly am I gaining from your approach vs just doing insert-only rows with metadata (version, timestamp, user etc)? I mean, besides a nicer UI?
Also, when you say “immutable, off-host” — are we talking like another SQL Server instance on a diff machine? Or something else entirely?
And can this be queried directly with SQL too? Or is it locked behind some API/UI?
This is super cool and I would love to try it out. We use SEMrush and they are basically charging us +$1000 dollar for the basic plan, with every other feature as an add-on for addition $200 - $400.
Question: Do you have (or plan to provide) features like -
-- Questions around the seed keywords
-- Keyword exports for external analysis with details like volume, difficulty, etc,
-- Can I tag keywords if I save them in a particular list?
In my work, I do SEO research almost every day and have a very extensive keyword strategy. So above features are what's keeping me stick to SEMrush.
I am from marketing, so maybe I don't really understand the technical value here but how is it different than me opening a new Google doc?
I currently have a single doc file that I use like notes, as soon as I type "note" in my address bar, my browser automatically fills in the rest of the URL for the file (since I open is frequently).
The Doc file allows me to paste images, add links, or anything else essential for note taking. I don't need to save, or find the URL from browser history. Simply type and close.
For any new file, I can type Doc.new. It will work the same way.
Also, when you say “immutable, off-host” — are we talking like another SQL Server instance on a diff machine? Or something else entirely?
And can this be queried directly with SQL too? Or is it locked behind some API/UI?