Editorial policy

The aidemo blog is written and published by the maintainers of aidemo, an MIT-licensed open-source engine that turns an agent-authored storyboard into a narrated, captioned product-demo video. The blog exists to answer practical questions about product demo videos — how to script, record, automate, and maintain them — and it holds itself to the same standard we hold the engine to: claims must be reproducible.

How articles are made#

Every article starts with research, not writing. We locate primary sources first — vendor documentation, web standards, published engineering write-ups, and credible industry research — and the article is drafted around what they actually say. Claims we could not anchor to a verifiable source do not ship.

Drafting is AI-assisted. We use AI tools to research, structure, and draft articles, and every article discloses this in the note at the end of the page. Before publishing, each article passes through:

  • A citation gate. Every reference is machine-resolved against its live source; a single dead or unverifiable reference quarantines the whole article until it is fixed.
  • Maintainer review. A maintainer reads each article for accuracy, fair characterization of the tools it names (including our own), and claims that overreach their sources, before it is published.

Evidence standards#

  • We cite primary sources — official docs, standards bodies, first-party engineering blogs, and published research — not other blogs summarizing them.
  • Numbered citations in the text link to the full reference list at the end of each article, where every entry links out to the original source.
  • When we compare demo tools, we say which one is ours. aidemo appears in comparisons only where it genuinely fits, with its limitations stated (browser-only, agent-authored, no timeline editor).
  • Pricing, feature, and capability claims about third-party tools are dated; vendors change things, and an article's updated date reflects when we last checked.

Corrections#

If you find an error — a misread source, a broken reference, a stale claim about a tool — open a GitHub issue and we will review it promptly. Confirmed errors are fixed in place and the article's updated date reflects the revision.

Contact#

aidemo maintainers · github.com/tandryukha/aidemo