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PROGRESS AND WORKFLOWS

Activity Tracker

Replace your static spreadsheet tracker


Visual Tracker

Automatically colour-code designs & drawings


Mobile App

Report progress easily in the field


Automated Handover Notifications

Send notifications to trades' mobile devices


Deliverables List & Reports

See and share all deliverables in one report


Workflow Templates

Build repeatable process workflows


Progress Audit Trail

Stay protected with a digital progress record

 

Baseline Scheduling

Transform your baseline into a production plan


Look-Ahead Planning

Update look-ahead plan based on data

 

QUALITY AND COMPLIANCE

QA Checklist

Assure quality and build Right First Time


Activity Sign-off

Get notifications and sign-off trades' work


Issue Sign-off

Get notifications when issues are flagged


Issue List & Reports

See and share all issues in one report


Issue Templates

Build repeatable issues workflows


Photo Documentation

Stay compliant with geo-tagged photos


Quality Audit Trail

Stay protected with a digital quality record

 

PAYMENT VALUATION AND INTELLIGENCE

Commercial Dashboard

Link costs directly to your site activities


Commercial Look-Ahead

See forecasted costs from your programme


Commercial Planned Works Valuation

Easily valuate actual achieved planned works

 

Deliverables Dashboard

High-level milestones overview

 

Quality Dashboard

Spot quality issues and trends proactively

 

 

Run Rate & Performance Dashboard

Track team performance against the plan

 

Activity Drilldown

Identify challenges before they escalate

 

 

 

FEATURED

Sablono Track Free replaces your existing spreadsheet tracker for simple progress reporting on-site.

Try it for free

FEATURED

Use Sablono to minimise defects, get to the root cause of quality issues and streamline your workflows to get it right first time.

The better QA system

Spree (2020)2020 -

Visually, the film utilizes the "Screenlife" format—cameras mounted on dashboards, phone screens, and CCTV—to create a sense of frantic immediacy. This stylistic choice mirrors the fragmented attention span of the modern internet user. However, beneath the chaotic interface lies a traditional moral vacuum. Kurt is not a mastermind; he is a pathetic product of a culture that equates visibility with worth. He lacks a coherent ideology, driven only by the "algorithm" he believes will eventually reward his commitment to the spectacle.

Eugene Kotlyarenko’s Spree (2020) is a jagged, neon-soaked satire that captures the anxiety of the attention economy with visceral intensity. At its core, the film is a cautionary tale about the erosion of the self in the pursuit of digital validation. By blending the "found footage" subgenre with the aesthetics of livestreaming, Spree creates a claustrophobic portrait of a man who views his own humanity—and the lives of others—as mere content for an indifferent audience. Spree (2020)2020

The Digital Colosseum: Desperation and Depravity in Spree (2020) Kurt is not a mastermind; he is a

What makes Spree particularly biting is its commentary on the complicity of the audience. As Kurt’s body count rises, the viewer sees the real-time feed of comments scrolling past. The digital crowd fluctuates between skepticism, bloodlust, and mockery, treating the unfolding tragedy like a performance or a "prank." This dynamic highlights a grim reality of the social media age: the blurring of lines between reality and entertainment. To Kurt, the lack of engagement is a fate worse than death; to his viewers, his violence is just another tab open in a browser. At its core, the film is a cautionary

In conclusion, Spree is a disturbing reflection of a world where the "like" button has become a metric for existence. It suggests that when the desire to be seen outstrips the capacity for empathy, the results are inevitably sociopathic. By the time the credits roll, the film leaves its audience with a chilling realization: Kurt Kunkle is not an anomaly, but a logical extreme of a culture that demands we broadcast our lives at any cost.

The film follows Kurt Kunkle (Joe Keery), a desperate rideshare driver who has spent a decade failing to become a social media influencer. His solution to his stagnant "follower count" is a murderous plan he calls "The Lesson." Kurt turns his car into a mobile death trap, livestreaming the poisoning and mechanical execution of his passengers. Keery’s performance is central to the film's success; he imbues Kurt with a terrifying "nice guy" vacuity, mimicking the upbeat, manic energy of popular YouTubers even as he commits atrocities.