Writing checks
Use the word counter and AI text detector to review drafts before publishing, submitting, or sending them to a client. They are meant for quick editorial judgment, not final proof by themselves.
A small collection of browser-friendly utilities for writers, bloggers, students, developers, and job seekers. Each tool is built around one practical task instead of a crowded dashboard.
Use the word counter and AI text detector to review drafts before publishing, submitting, or sending them to a client. They are meant for quick editorial judgment, not final proof by themselves.
The GEO checker looks at answer-friendly structure, FAQs, topic coverage, trust cues, and brand mentions so a page is easier to understand in modern search experiences.
The resume gap analyzer compares a resume with a job description and turns missing keywords or weak sections into a practical editing checklist.
Check AI search visibility for pasted content with GEO scoring, FAQ gaps, trust signals, and answer-engine readiness.
Check if text was written by AI or a human. Analyzes 5 linguistic signals — no login needed.
Paste any text to get word count, character count and estimated reading time.
Compare your resume against a job description to spot missing skills and keywords.
I regularly work on blog posts, AI tool reviews, web pages, resumes, and small automations. A lot of that work needs simple checks: how long is this draft, does it sound too uniform, what skill keywords are missing, or whether a page has enough evidence for answer engines to summarize it confidently.
These tools keep those checks fast. They do not replace human editing, SEO research, or hiring judgment, but they give a clear starting point before you publish, apply, or rewrite.
The tools are designed to be lightweight and transparent. Where a tool runs in the browser, the page explains that behavior directly. Scores should be treated as guidance because automated checks can miss context, tone, niche terminology, and the intent behind a draft.