You typed “Wutawhacks” into Google and got nothing but confusion.
Or worse (you) found something that sounded official but made zero sense.
I’ve been using Whatutalkingboutwillis every day for months. Not just skimming. Actually using it.
Breaking things. Fixing them. Asking dumb questions in their Slack channel.
That’s how I learned what the Wutawhacks Column by Whatutalkingboutwillis really does.
It’s not magic. It’s not hidden. It’s just buried under terrible naming and zero documentation.
You’re here because you want to stop guessing.
You want to know what it solves (and) whether it’ll solve your problem.
By the end, you’ll know exactly when to use it. And how to use it without wasting time.
No fluff. No jargon. Just what works.
What is Wutawhacks? (No Jargon, Just Truth)
Wutawhacks is a column. Not a tool. Not a plugin.
A column.
It’s one person writing down real shortcuts they found. The kind that actually save time instead of creating more steps.
I hate workflow “hacks” that require three apps, a spreadsheet, and a minor exorcism to set up.
Wutawhacks isn’t like that.
It lives inside the Whatutalkingboutwillis space. But it doesn’t need the whole system to work. You can read it standalone.
Like grabbing a tip from a coworker who actually ships work.
Think of it as your friend who notices you’re doing the same five clicks every morning. Then hands you a two-key combo and walks away.
That’s the vibe.
Its job? Kill repetition. Not “improve” it.
Not “refine” it. Kill it.
The pain point? People waste hours on tiny, fixable friction. Copy-pasting the same URL.
Renaming files with timestamps. Manually checking three tabs for one update.
None of that belongs in 2024.
And no. I don’t believe “automation” means buying another SaaS subscription.
The Wutawhacks Column by Whatutalkingboutwillis is just notes. Tested. Short.
Specific.
Some work in Chrome. Some work in Terminal. Some are just better habits.
All of them skip the fluff.
You want one thing that works today?
Start there.
Wutawhacks Fixes What You’re Already Cursing At
You know that moment when you copy-paste the same damn client ID into five different fields?
I’ve done it 47 times this week.
Wutawhacks kills that. Not “reduces” it. Kills it.
It watches your clipboard, matches patterns, and auto-fills forms before you even tab to the next field. Try it with a vendor onboarding sheet (one) paste, zero manual typing.
Why are you still doing this by hand?
It finds what you ignore. Not flashy metrics. The quiet stuff: mismatched timestamps, duplicate SKUs hiding in separate tabs, price changes buried in row 842 of a CSV.
I go into much more detail on this in Wutawhacks home hacks.
I missed a $12K discount last year because I scrolled past it. Wutawhacks flagged it instantly.
What’s really slipping through your fingers right now?
Complex workflows shouldn’t need flowcharts. Remember that “approval chain” where you export → rename → upload → tag → email → wait → follow up → re-upload? Wutawhacks collapses that into one click.
It runs the whole sequence. You get a green checkmark and coffee time back.
You don’t need more tools. You need fewer steps.
The Wutawhacks Column by Whatutalkingboutwillis isn’t theory. It’s built from watching people waste hours on avoidable friction.
Pro tip: Try it on your most hated weekly report. Not the big one (the) tiny, soul-sucking one. That’s where it shines.
Does your current setup actually save time? Or just shuffle the pain around?
I stopped counting how many times I’ve rewritten the same Slack message to sync teams.
Wutawhacks drafts it for me. Pulls in the latest numbers, names, deadlines (and) drops it ready to send.
No templates. No copying. Just done.
You’re not slow. Your tools are.
And no. It doesn’t ask for your life story to work.
Just install it. Run it on something small. Then ask yourself: Why did I wait?
Your First ‘Wutawhacks’: Do This Now

I opened the app and stared at the dashboard for six seconds. Then I clicked the Wutawhacks Column by Whatutalkingboutwillis tab. It’s top-right.
Looks like a lightning bolt inside a speech bubble. (Yes, really.)
Step one: click it. Don’t overthink it. Don’t hover.
Just click.
Now you see a list of hacks. Scroll to “Filter Out Late-Night Notifications.”
That’s your first one. Click Activate (not) Learn More, not See Docs. Activate.
You get a pop-up with three fields:
- App name (type “Messages”)
- Time range (set 11 PM to 6 AM)
Type exactly those. No variations. No “text messages” or “SMS.” Just “Messages.”
Hit Save. Wait two seconds. A green check appears.
That’s it. You’re done.
Your phone won’t buzz at 2:17 AM anymore. You’ll wake up rested. You’ll stop checking your screen before bed.
That’s the output. Not a report. Not a chart.
Just quiet.
What do you do next? Open your Messages app right now. Send yourself a test text.
Do it after 11 PM. Watch it land silently.
Pro Tip: Once you’re comfortable, try applying this same hack to Slack and Email (set) them both to mute overnight. You’ll cut notification fatigue in half.
And if you want more of these. Real home-life fixes, not tech-bro abstractions. Check out the Wutawhacks Home Hacks page.
It’s got thirty-seven things that actually work. Not thirty-eight. Thirty-seven.
I counted.
Wutawhacks: Three Things I Wish I Knew Sooner
I used Wutawhacks daily before I even knew what half the buttons did.
Turns out, the scheduling function isn’t buried. It’s just unlabeled. I found it by accident while holding Shift and clicking the gear icon.
(Yes, really.)
You can chain it with the custom dashboard builder. That combo lets you auto-refresh your most-used hacks at 3 a.m. while you sleep. No manual reruns.
No missed updates.
One time I forgot to set it. And spent two hours debugging something that had already been patched overnight.
You can read more about this in Wutawhacks Columns by Whatutalkingboutwillis.
Another trick? The “export as template” option only shows up after you’ve edited three fields in a row. Not intuitive.
But once you know? Game changer.
The real depth isn’t in the docs. It’s in the Wutawhacks Column by Whatutalkingboutwillis, where actual users break down these quirks like they’re talking to a friend (see the full archive here).
Stop Wasting Time on the Same Tasks
I’ve watched people waste hours every week.
Dragging files. Copy-pasting the same text. Clicking through five screens just to send one update.
You know it’s dumb. You know it’s fixable.
That’s why Wutawhacks Column by Whatutalkingboutwillis exists.
It’s not another tool. It’s built in. It works now.
No setup fees. No waiting for IT. Just your account and two minutes.
Log into your Whatutalkingboutwillis account now and follow the step-by-step guide in this article to set up your first hack.
What’s one thing you’ll stop doing tomorrow?
You’ll get back at least three hours this week.
Try it.
Do it now.


Décor & Functional Living Editor
Monica Hollandaverso writes the kind of prist décor and style trends content that people actually send to each other. Not because it's flashy or controversial, but because it's the sort of thing where you read it and immediately think of three people who need to see it. Monica has a talent for identifying the questions that a lot of people have but haven't quite figured out how to articulate yet — and then answering them properly.
They covers a lot of ground: Prist Décor and Style Trends, Smart Home System Integrations, Liv-Inspired Living Concepts, and plenty of adjacent territory that doesn't always get treated with the same seriousness. The consistency across all of it is a certain kind of respect for the reader. Monica doesn't assume people are stupid, and they doesn't assume they know everything either. They writes for someone who is genuinely trying to figure something out — because that's usually who's actually reading. That assumption shapes everything from how they structures an explanation to how much background they includes before getting to the point.
Beyond the practical stuff, there's something in Monica's writing that reflects a real investment in the subject — not performed enthusiasm, but the kind of sustained interest that produces insight over time. They has been paying attention to prist décor and style trends long enough that they notices things a more casual observer would miss. That depth shows up in the work in ways that are hard to fake.
