
Your PM tool shouldn't need its own project manager. Workzone is project management software that shows you every project, every deadline, every bottleneck in one view. Your team tracks work. You see the big picture. Simple enough that people actually use it.
Replace the guesswork. See the work.
Wow this is going to be huge.
I've been testing Claude's new ability to generate complex interactive diagrams on the fly and I've been absolutely blown away by what I've seen. The future is here without a doubt.
Claude can now visualize literally any concept you can think of in this world.
I asked it to visualize a network request and the results were completely insane -- it illustrated everything so easily and effortlessly.

All from a single, dead simple prompt -- not even up to 10 words:
visualize how a network request worksAnd the keyword here is interactive -- these are not just passive diagrams for you to observe -- many of them will actually let you tweak settings and see how various parameters work in your visualization for deeper understanding.
Like this side-by-side sorting algorithm visualization I asked it to do -- I was able to adjust options like the array size and the sorting speed.

They're like mini-apps generated on the fly -- we're definitely heading in this direction right now.
You can even click on them for more details -- it will automatically send a new prompt -- which will generate a new diagram 👇
You could break down the most intricate systems into their deepest, most fundamental foundational concepts:

In this article I asked it to generate 21 different diagrams -- in various aspects of Computer Science and software dev, from system design to AI to networking -- and it was unbelievable. It just kept delivering.
Algorithms & data structures
1. Graph traversal (BFS vs DFS)
I asked it to show visually show me the different between breadth-first and
Visualize BFS and DFS traversal on the same graph, showing node visitation order and paths.
2. Sorting algorithm race
Visualize multiple sorting algorithms (quicksort, mergesort, bubblesort) side by side, showing element movements over time.
3. Memory layout of data structures
Show stack and heap memory layout with variables, objects, pointers, and references during execution.
4. Hash table collision handling
Visualize hash table collisions using chaining and open addressing, showing how keys are stored and resolved.
System design & architecture
5. Microservices architecture map
Show a microservices system with services, APIs, databases, and message queues, including communication between components.
6. Event-driven architecture flow
Visualize an event-driven system with producers, brokers, and consumers, showing asynchronous message flow.
7. Distributed system with CAP tradeoffs
Visualize a distributed system under network partition, showing how consistency and availability affect data across nodes.
8. Kubernetes cluster anatomy
Show a Kubernetes cluster with nodes, pods, services, and ingress, including their relationships.
Artificial intelligence
9. Transformer architecture ("attention is all you need...")
Voice dictation that doesn't mangle your syntax.
Most dictation tools choke on technical language. Wispr Flow doesn't. It understands code syntax, framework names, and developer jargon - so you can dictate directly into your IDE and send without fixing.
Use it everywhere: Cursor, VS Code, Slack, Linear, Notion, your browser. Flow sits at the system level, so there's nothing to install per-app. Tap and talk.
Developers use Flow to write documentation 4x faster, give coding agents richer context, and respond to Slack without breaking focus. 89% of messages go out with zero edits.
Millions of users worldwide. Now on Mac, Windows, iPhone, and Android (free and unlimited on Android during launch).



