Day 2
@helloryanj made an introduction for us to Fload and something unusual popped up - they owe Monefy
The expense tracker I have been using for almost 3 years.
All the best to Fload, they are building a really great product.
Then we got a plenty of merch from @creem_io and I even kept the streak of 2 days shipping ASO improvements
Even though the weather was trying to slow us down with +35 degrees, we survived and only got stronger 💪
Starting DAY 3 at Uneed Residency
@helloryanj Thank you so much for the presentation!
Your product removes a huge headache for app developers, and now I already want to move faster with bringing my two app ideas to life just to use Fload 😄
Great idea and great presentation!
#predictionjar #uneedresidency @T_Zahil
More importantly, Fload levels the playing field for all app developers.
The next era won't just reward better builders. It will split apps that self-optimise from apps that don't.
"What the App Store actually needs is two tiers.
Think of it like football leagues. The App Store as it exists today that's the Premier League. The top division. Where 99% of the traffic goes, where the rankings mean something, where the established apps compete on merit built over years.
Then there should be a second division. A proving ground. New apps start there by default. Vibecoded apps, first-time developers, fresh submissions they all enter Division Two. The bar to get listed is lower. You can ship fast, test ideas, find early users.
But to get promoted to the main App Store, you have to earn it. Consistent updates. Real engagement metrics. Retention that proves people actually use your app beyond day one. Reviews from real users. Maintain that for three to six months and you graduate to Division One. Stop maintaining it and you get relegated back down.
This solves everything. New developers still get to ship and learn. The main App Store stays clean and high-quality. Users don't have to wade through thousands of half-built apps to find what they need. And the developers who've built their apps into real businesses don't have their organic real estate diluted by apps that will be abandoned in a month.
Apple already does this informally the algorithm effectively creates these tiers by burying new apps. The difference is right now it's invisible and feels arbitrary. Making it explicit would be fairer for everyone."