What happens when designers, PMs, and ops teams start shipping software themselves?
@Musixmatch — the company powering lyrics on Spotify, Apple Music, and Google — found out firsthand. Faced with six-month product cycles and a growing backlog of ideas that never shipped, they turned to Replit.
In roughly two months, they went from concept to a live artist merch tool — with 1,000+ T-shirts already shipped and a brand-new revenue stream to show for it.
Watch the full Musixmatch story to see what's possible when everyone in your org can build.
@ericmigi@Pebble Brilliant product, I love that you don't have to charge it but what if for some reason (i.e. a bug) the mic stays on and drains the battery?
@tcosta I mean a Fey API that users could call to send their portfolio with buy dates and prices. I could for example call my bank’s API and Fey’s API to keep my portfolio synced
HARMONY OF RESILIENCE: Recorded in space and sent to Earth via @SpaceX’s @Starlink constellation, Polaris Dawn crewmember and violinist @Gillis_SarahE invites you to enjoy this music moment in support of @StJude & @ElSistemaUSA → https://t.co/My8cUwAWzg
@UltraLinx The problem is that Apple can’t afford having Siri hallucinating and giving wrong information while no one cares if the Human AI Pin or the Rabbit R1 gets stuff wrong. It needs to be perfect.
@andres_vidoza Get a personal trainer, set up a regular schedule, stick to the program (accountability) and noticing progress will make you wanna do it more and more.
Hey, check this out https://t.co/CcZNvu1qUX
@Musixmatch's design system with its react-native component library implementation. My drops of sweats are still on those files 😂 so proud of this and the team we are.
@linaeons The hardware is definitely impressive but you can't be serious about building a category-defining product with software that just calls a 3rd party API.