Productivity is not always about doing more. Very often, it starts with something much simpler: finding the right tool quickly, at the right moment, without losing the thread of what you were doing.

In a creative or technical project, switching contexts is constant. You open a note, then a PDF. You check a web page. You test a piece of code. You look at an image, a video, an audio file, an Office document, a moodboard, a whiteboard. Each tool is useful. But each new window can also break the momentum.

The Panaches home screen is built around that idea.

It does not only present a list of modules. It acts as an entry point to real actions: browse, write, read, code, organize, annotate, listen, watch, compare, structure. The goal is to reduce the time lost between intention and action.

This is also why the home screen quickly exposes the elements of trust: trial, license, settings, then the working tools. A useful workspace must remain readable. You should understand where you are, what you can launch and how to return to your project without scattering your attention.

This structure also matters for Panaches as a media and communication space. It makes it possible to explain the software through real uses, not abstract promises. Each module can become a tutorial, a resource, a demonstration or a concrete article: how to organize research, prepare a project, read a document, create a moodboard, test an idea or document a decision.

The real subject is not “how many tools are available”. The real subject is: how much time and attention can be preserved when those tools live in the same space?

Panaches aims for that continuity. Less scattering, more context. Less friction, more real work.