France And Germany Form Open Source Writing Collaboration
April 30, 2025
Open source software and AI algorithms are a match made in heaven. You can’t say the same thing about France and Germany when it comes to history, but the countries can put aside their differences (occasionally) to advance technology. The French and German governments came together to design Docs.
Docs is described as “Collaborative writing, simplified-collaborate and write in real time, without layout constraints.” I don’t know if the term “layout” refers to a writing software’s formatting or if it means limited to the constraints of writing software. It could mean either of things or something is lost in the literal translation. Ich habe keine Ahnung. Je ne c’est pas.
Docs is built on the Django Rest Framework and Nest.js. It also uses BlockNote.js and Yes (they also sponsor those text editors too). Docs can be self-hosted, has a business friendly license, and welcomes anyone to contribute to its growth either monetarily or via code). Here is what Docs offers as a writing partner:
“Docs offers an intuitive writing experience. Its minimalist interface favors content over layout, while offering the essentials: media import, offline mode and keyboard shortcuts for greater efficiency.”
So far that sounds très magnifique and ausgezeichnet! Docs also offers simple real-time collaboration. Users on a document can access the same document, see changes made live, and maintain control of the document for data security. Docs also has universal formats for exportation: OpenDocument, Word, and PDF.
A nifty feature unavailable with most writing software is the ability to organize documents into knowledge bases with subpages. This feature also comes with search and pinning capabilities.
This French and German writing collaboration sounds amazing! Break out the champagne and beer and enjoy some croissants and pretzels. This is one open source tool everyone needs!
Whitney Grace, April 30, 2025
Comments
Got something to say?