Wox arrived on Windows as a compact, Spotlight‑style launcher that promised to speed app and file access, slot useful utilities (calculator, color picker, clipboard history) into a single keyboard-driven surface, and let users extend the experience with a rich plugin ecosystem—an approach that...
Wox’s revival is one of the quieter — but most consequential — stories in the Windows productivity scene: a once-dormant open‑source launcher has been rebuilt for cross‑platform use, shipped a string of 2.0 beta releases, and reintroduced a speedy, plugin‑first Spotlight‑style workflow to...