@DanielSmidstrup Most AI tools generate Next.js by default, and Vercel has made deploying it a zero-config experience. I think that's probably the single biggest reason for its popularity.
Want paying customers fast?
Stop building "innovative." Start building boring.
> Walk into local businesses (gyms, clubs, shops)
> Watch what they do manually every day
> Build the dumbest tool that fixes it
A timer + a price calculator just got a snooker club owner to pay real money.
No tech audience. No competition. Just utility.
Bookmark this before your next "big idea."
I've used plenty of AI models. Even the weaker ones can write backend code fairly well, but some React bugs still stump powerful models like Sonnet and Opus.
As a backend developer, I used to think I was struggling because I lacked frontend knowledge. This tweet reminded me that React is just hard for both humans and AI. ☠️
If you've ever felt like giving up because "there are already 500 people doing the same thing," remember this:
Those 500 people are having the same doubts.
They're wondering if the market is too crowded. They're questioning whether they're good enough. Many of them will quit.
The moment everyone starts thinking about giving up is exactly when you should keep going.
I haven't done much SEO for keywords related to my niche, but I've noticed that people from around the world have somehow started discovering my tool organically.
It's actually an old tool that I originally built for myself and then forgot about. Recently, I've seen more and more people finding it through Google and using it almost daily, which has been a pleasant surprise.
Since I've done very little marketing or SEO, I'm wondering if there are any opportunities I'm missing. I'd really appreciate any suggestions on how to increase impressions, attract more relevant traffic, and grow awareness within my niche.
If you've had success promoting a free tool or growing organic traffic, I'd love to hear what worked for you.
P.S. The tool is completely free to use, so feel free to try it out and share any feedback!
If you're consistently getting bad outputs, there's a good chance you dont actually know what you want.
The quality of answer is often limited by the clarity of question.
Your AI might expose your fuzzy thinking too so keep an eye on it.
The brain rot is so f*ckin real, man.
I'm so used to being spoonfed by AI that I just asked ChatGPT how to update a value in a database row.
The answer was literally a simple UPDATE statement.
I've used it hundreds of times before. 💀
Claude is getting a lot of hate lately, and honestly, some of it is deserved.
Research tasks get blocked, the model feels unnecessarily restricted, and many users suspect the best capabilities aren't available to the public.
Also, has anyone else noticed what seems like a negative bias toward China in its responses? 🤔
Claude is getting a lot of hate lately, and honestly, some of it is deserved.
Research tasks get blocked, the model feels unnecessarily restricted, and many users suspect the best capabilities aren't available to the public.
Also, has anyone else noticed what seems like a negative bias toward China in its responses? 🤔
Using AI to write code feels like gliding.
Features get built faster than ever.
But the deeper the implementation goes, the heavier this quiet question becomes:
Do I actually understand what's happening, or am I just getting good at prompting?
Anyone else feel this?