Day 3 of building a startup every week.
Settled on an idea: Search & Generate anything, in grids
- Products
- Sites
- Web images
- AI Images
- Flashcards
- Companies
- etc.
I'm worried this is converging to @_widgens_ . Less functional but more aesthetic
Day 7) Widgens, your [e-commerce product photographer]
Simply upload an image of your product and ask to place it in different background/scenarios/settings. Prompt below 👇
Idea by @soydanielwey
You're welcome, @on_running
Sound on! 🔊
Day 2) Widgens, your [vibecoder]
Let’s face it — prompt-to-app tools like Lovable are great. But most of us use them to kick off a prototype. In that zero-to-one phase, getting multiple variations of the same app — each with different styles or features — is often more helpful than trying to nail the “final” version right away. First exploration, then refinement. Right?
That’s why, in the context of prototyping, I believe a prompt-to-many-apps approach makes way more sense. It gives you unexpected variations — features and designs you didn’t even think to ask for — and then you can pick the one worth refining (see video).
What’s your take? Drop your thoughts below. Links and examples in the comments. 👇
Sound on! 🔊
Day 3) Widgens, your [shopping assistant]
Here’s another use case—shopping! You can search for products and expand them to discover relevant items, summaries, video reviews, and more. Link below! 👇
🎨 FRACTURED GEO PARTICLE 🎨
Base prompt :
A Fractured Geo-Particle Blast composition of [SUBJECT], presenting the athlete in fragmented shards that explode across the stadium. Employ mosaic-like shapes in contrasting [COLOR1] and [COLOR2] to convey a sense of forceful collision and breakneck agility.
Check ALTS
Sound on! 🔊
Day 2) Widgens, your [vibecoder]
Let’s face it — prompt-to-app tools like Lovable are great. But most of us use them to kick off a prototype. In that zero-to-one phase, getting multiple variations of the same app — each with different styles or features — is often more helpful than trying to nail the “final” version right away. First exploration, then refinement. Right?
That’s why, in the context of prototyping, I believe a prompt-to-many-apps approach makes way more sense. It gives you unexpected variations — features and designs you didn’t even think to ask for — and then you can pick the one worth refining (see video).
What’s your take? Drop your thoughts below. Links and examples in the comments. 👇
@benswerd There you go! Struggles a bit more on outline logos, but hope you find it helpful. Here's the dashboard to add your won: https://t.co/MtOzIqYxDn