Hey, I'm building ProviderSignal: a dental market intelligence app for dental suppliers, brokers, and DSO business development teams. We have a live MCP server and REST API with x402 agent payments, on government dental data.
Check it out here: https://t.co/ymfAVdQbjq
@HoussamDesigner I'm sure you could get some newsletter going/X monetization on that 100k followers to dwarf $5,000/month. Knowing my luck that one client would cancel on me after a month and ask for a refund.
@boardyai Shipping https://t.co/ymfAVdQbjq. We turn public dental records into practice change-detection alerts: who just opened, added an associate, moved, retired, or got acquired. Built for dental supply reps, DSO acquirers, and brokers. Funding round: 0, it's Me.
Sharing some headaches encountered while out there building.
I had a Stripe webhook fail silently for 24 hours before I noticed. Only one event type broke, the one that calls back out to Stripe. On Cloudflare Workers the default Stripe client doesn't error, it just hangs until the 80-second timeout.
One-line fix: createFetchHttpClient().🤦♂️
@KaiXCreator Shipping https://t.co/ymfAVdQbjq. We turn public dental records into practice change-detection alerts: who just opened, added an associate, moved, retired, or got acquired. Built for dental supply reps, DSO acquirers, and brokers.
@emad_maker@X Dropping in and saying hi! Shipping https://t.co/ymfAVdQbjq. We turn public dental records into practice change-detection alerts: who just opened, added an associate, moved, retired, or got acquired. Built for dental supply reps, DSO acquirers, and brokers.
@perkmaybe Kindly promoting. Built https://t.co/ymfAVdQbjq. We turn public dental records into practice change-detection alerts: who just opened, added an associate, moved, retired, or got acquired. Built for dental supply reps, DSO acquirers, and brokers.
Military Dentistry’s Greatest Marketing Lesson: Readiness, Not Teeth. The military doesn’t care about white teeth, smile makeovers, or five-star reviews. It cares about one thing: readiness.
For decades, the U.S. military has treated oral health as a deployability issue. Service members with untreated dental disease are more likely to experience emergencies, lose duty time, require costly treatment, and in some cases need medical evacuation from operational environments.
The military’s solution is simple: prevention. Routine exams, radiographs, cleanings, early restorative care, risk assessment, and outcome tracking.
Studies from the U.S. Air Force and international military populations reach the same conclusion: untreated dental disease reduces readiness. The strongest risk factors are familiar to every dentist—irregular dental visits, tobacco use, and limited access to preventive care.
The real lesson extends far beyond the military. What military leaders call readiness, employers call productivity, reliability, attendance, focus, and performance.
Dentistry often undersells itself. Preventive care isn’t just about avoiding cavities. It’s risk management. Prevent a small problem today so it doesn’t become a crisis tomorrow.
If the military treats oral health as essential to mission readiness, perhaps we should spend more time talking about how it affects life readiness.