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About the Creator

Fred Stutzman is a Ph.D. student and teaching fellow at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill’s School of Information and Library Science. Advised by Dr. Gary Marchionini, his dissertation looks at how people use social network sites for support during a life transition. He is also interested in the decisions people make when constructing their online identities. Fred studies quantitative methodologies at the Odum Institute for Research in Social Sciences.

Prior to graduate school, Fred worked in technical and management roles for Ibiblio.org, The Motley Fool, and Nortel Networks. He is the co-founder of ClaimID.com, a social web identity management system, and designer of Freedom, a productivity application. Fred has consulted with top organizations, including the Pew Internet and American Life Project and MacArthur Foundation, and the presidential campaigns of Wesley Clark, John Kerry and John Edwards. His work has been featured in the New York Times, Wall Street Journal, Financial Times, USA Today, Washington Post, Boston Globe, Chicago Tribune, Los Angeles Times, San Francisco Chronicle, as well as Wired, Newsweek and the New York Times Magazine, and on NPR.

His homepage is http://fredstutzman.com.

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Current Version: 0.5.1


Freedom is free to use. Download and open Freedom.dmg, then drag Freedom.app to your Applications folder. Mac OS X only, tested through 10.6.1.

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Writers on Freedom

Jason Snell, legendary Mac journalist and editorial director, Mac Publishing (publisher of MacWorld): "There may be no bigger boon to Mac productivity.."


Rebecca Traister, writer, Salon and New York Magazine: "I have gotten an immense amount of work done.."


David Sirota, author of New York Times Bestsellers Hostile Takeover (Three Rivers) and The Uprising (Crown): "The greatest tool for work efficiency in Apple programming history."


Dennis Cass, journalist and author of Head Case (HarperCollins): "To say that it’s changed my life is an understatement."


Doree Shafrir, author of Love, Mom: Poignant, Goofy, Brilliant Messages from Home (Hyperion) and writer/editor New York Observer, Gawker, Philadelphia Weekly: "45 minutes of Freedom=844 words written. It's a miracle, I tell you!."


Leo Babauta, editor of Zen Habits and author of The Power of Less (Hyperion): "When I need to do serious work, I try to remove distractions by closing the browser to do actual work. If I find myself opening the browser too much, I’ll use a utility (such as Freedom) to shut off the Internet altogether."


All quotes unsolicited, and sourced from content posted to the web. No endorsement implied.