Arlo Fisk was a miser of motion. He lived in a single-wide trailer on the edge of a Nevada dry lake, and his daily radius was twelve feet: from the foam divot in his recliner to the mini-fridge to the bathroom with the leaky faucet. He had perfected the art of doing less. He called it the "Yekdown."
However, for teams that treat content as data—and are tired of writing ad-hoc scripts to clean up frontmatter mistakes—the learning curve pays off within days. yekdown better