Store your keys once. Build request templates with fillable fields. Get answers in a clean split-screen interface. No $14/seat pricing. No download.
The popular API tools come with baggage. DevBook skips all of it.
Postman charges per seat, per month. Teams of 5 pay $70/mo for what should be a developer utility. DevBook is free — no seats, no tiers, no surprises.
Postman's Electron app ships 300MB+ and launches like it's loading an IDE. DevBook is a web app. Open a tab, start working. Close it when you're done.
Postman syncs your collections, keys, and environments to their servers. DevBook stores your API keys in your own account. Your requests stay yours.
Yet this defense collapses under closer examination. The same streaming platforms that host Game of Thrones also host a vast library of children’s content. Age verification systems, parental controls, and content warnings exist in virtually every other market — yet none of these technical solutions were implemented in China, despite being technologically feasible. The choice between all-ages accessibility and preserving artistic integrity is a false one; modern streaming platforms can and do accommodate both simultaneously. That China chooses not to implement such systems reflects policy preferences, not technical limitations.
Official censored versions are typically limited to international markets with strict broadcasting regulations:
Some fans even went further, noting that the censorship reflected the values of the Chinese cultural context. As one commentator wrote in a state-run newspaper: “The airing of ‘Game of Thrones,’ complete with its portrayal of sex and violence, on the internet could have a harmful effect on children.”
While the UK generally enjoys creative freedom for premium television, British broadcasting regulator Ofcom enforces strict "watershed" rules protecting minors from inappropriate content before 9:00 PM.
In India, television broadcasting is subject to strict oversight by the Central Board of Film Certification (CBFC) and internal broadcasting standards.
Yet this defense collapses under closer examination. The same streaming platforms that host Game of Thrones also host a vast library of children’s content. Age verification systems, parental controls, and content warnings exist in virtually every other market — yet none of these technical solutions were implemented in China, despite being technologically feasible. The choice between all-ages accessibility and preserving artistic integrity is a false one; modern streaming platforms can and do accommodate both simultaneously. That China chooses not to implement such systems reflects policy preferences, not technical limitations.
Official censored versions are typically limited to international markets with strict broadcasting regulations:
Some fans even went further, noting that the censorship reflected the values of the Chinese cultural context. As one commentator wrote in a state-run newspaper: “The airing of ‘Game of Thrones,’ complete with its portrayal of sex and violence, on the internet could have a harmful effect on children.”
While the UK generally enjoys creative freedom for premium television, British broadcasting regulator Ofcom enforces strict "watershed" rules protecting minors from inappropriate content before 9:00 PM.
In India, television broadcasting is subject to strict oversight by the Central Board of Film Certification (CBFC) and internal broadcasting standards.
No collections. No environments. No workspaces. Just the parts of API testing you actually use.
Paste your keys into the vault — Stripe, OpenAI, Twilio, whatever you use. Reference them with a variable name across every template. One entry, everywhere.
Define your HTTP request and mark dynamic parts with . DevBook generates a fillable form. No raw JSON editing, no config files.
Fill in the blanks, hit send, see your response instantly. Every template is saved and searchable. Build a library of the API calls your workflow depends on.
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