About ruesken.net

Hi, I’m Christian Rüsken—and I build tools because I love it.

ruesken.net is not a “business project” in the traditional sense. It is my personal software home—and the result of something that has been with me for over 30 years: the joy of solving problems elegantly.

I’ve been developing software for as long as I can remember. And even though my days are sometimes packed, there’s always that moment in the evening (or on the weekend) when I sit down, clear my head—and just start building. Not because I “have to,” but because I want to. Because I enjoy making things better. Clearer. Faster. Simpler.

Christian Rüsken am Schreibtisch

“My passion is software that noticeably improves people’s everyday lives.”

Why “Everyday Tools”?

Because it’s exactly those little tasks that keep coming up that annoy me. Those “this should only take a minute…” moments that end up taking forever:

Everyday Tools are designed for exactly that: real-life problems. Not overloaded, not loud, not complicated—just tools you open, use, and then forget about because they simply work.

How I develop (and what matters to me)

I build these tools the way I would like to use them myself:

A clear focus instead of a jumble of features. Better to have a few features that are really good.
A clean, modern interface instead of a visual mess. Software should help — not distract.
No cloud, no subscription, no hidden catches. You buy a license, use the tool — that’s it.
Well done. Stable, reliable, technically sound. I’m pretty picky about that.

What you can expect from ruesken.net

ruesken.net is growing step by step. Every tool is born out of a specific need—sometimes from my own daily life, sometimes from user feedback, and sometimes from the simple thought: “There must be a better way.”

So if you like software that doesn’t lecture you, doesn’t overwhelm you, and doesn’t try to impress you—but simply makes your work easier: Welcome to ruesken.net.

In short:
I build software that doesn’t need explaining—because it feels exactly as it should.

— Christian Rüsken