And you’d be mislead. The video shows the original file is converted to different formats, depending on the user’s selection. The video shows jpeg to html (using AI to perform OCR?).
That argument really skips over what most people actually need. Nobody outside of a tech bubble wants to learn half a dozen Pandoc flags, stitch together shell commands and temp files, or write Lua filters just to reshape a document. With our drive layer you literally rename a file or type “make this header bold and export as PDF” and the work just happens, no scripts required.
This isn’t about replacing power-user workflows, it’s about giving anyone on your team the ability to reshape data and documents without ever opening a terminal. You getflexibility with the simple UX of renaming a file. Calling it “Pandoc plus AI” misses the fact that 90 percent of users neither know nor care about Pandoc’s internals. They just want “I have a file, make it look like this, or formatted with these sections to share with X person who works in X field...” and that’s exactly what our natural-language, filesystem-driven approach delivers.
Pandoc but extra AI steps.