🚀 Big news — Node7 is live!
Over the last weeks I’ve been building Node7, a tool to seamlessly store, organize and generate prompts.
Why? Because I constantly struggled with messy docs, lost snippets and having to rewrite the same things over and over when working with AI.
With Node7 you can:
✅ Save and organize your prompts in one place
✅ Generate new prompts with ease
✅ Compare versions and improve your workflow
✅ Use it whether you’re coding, writing emails, or building products
I truly believe this will make working with AI smoother and more effective.
Check it out here: https://t.co/ihW1Ir1Ei5
I just found a Github repository with all books you need for software development.
Books like these are included:
- Clean Code Collection – Robert C. Martin
- Clean Architecture: A Craftsman’s Guide – Robert C. Martin
- Design Patterns: Elements of Reusable Object-Oriented Software – Erich Gamma et al.
- Domain-Driven Design: Tackling Complexity in the Heart of Software – Eric Evans
- Designing Data-Intensive Applications – Martin Kleppmann
Github: https://t.co/U6lpanQrlE
Credits: Guillermo Moral
🚀 Big news — Node7 is live!
Over the last weeks I’ve been building Node7, a tool to seamlessly store, organize and generate prompts.
Why? Because I constantly struggled with messy docs, lost snippets and having to rewrite the same things over and over when working with AI.
With Node7 you can:
✅ Save and organize your prompts in one place
✅ Generate new prompts with ease
✅ Compare versions and improve your workflow
✅ Use it whether you’re coding, writing emails, or building products
I truly believe this will make working with AI smoother and more effective.
Check it out here: https://t.co/ihW1Ir1Ei5
I am currently looking into reddit marketing for my tool and I very curious how you guys do it?
I heard it is a really powerful platform for marketing your SaaS but only if you do it right. So I am glad for anybody helping me with this.😃
School drains all my energy.
It’s something I’ve been struggling with since the start of my SaaS journey and I still haven’t figured out how to avoid it. I don’t know if it’s the air, the lessons, the people or all of them but something there just kills my energy.
Has anyone in the same position figured this out? Or do we just ignore it?
Also, I feel unproductive when I only work 4 hours on my SaaS, even if I spent 8 hours at school and worked out.
Glad I’ve only got one year left until my diploma. I’ll probably just push through.😅
Why do business guru's always tell you to get up at 4AM and work as long as possible.
I just don't get that shit. They don't understand that our bodies need about 8 hours of sleep a day. Also how should I focus when I am tired AF.
I don't say I had no phases where I woke up at 4AM but I learned that it does not matter how long you work but how good you work.
How I structure my day currently:
- Work from 8AM to 10AM
- GYM from 10AM to 12AM
- Lunch from 12AM to 2PM
- Work from 2PM to around 6PM
- Dinner from 6PM to 7PM
- Work from 7PM to 10PM
This daily routine lets me focus on my work almost the whole day.
BTW Sunday is rest day to reset.
Software development is:
- 5 different browser open at the same time
- 7 terminals
- avg. RAM usage of 30GB
- 24/7 on X
- drinking 5L of water
- trying to fix a bug for 1 week
- no sunlight for days
Most valuable learnings in SaaS:
Product:
- Launch asap
- Don't ship useless features
- Talk to users
- Solve your problems
- Stick to one Tech Stack
- Don't market aggressively
Networking:
- Post on X
- Engage with other founders
- Post consistently
- Use the correct communities
I just got my first upvote on @ProductHunt
I built a prompt management tool that lets you store, organize and generate prompts for AI Models.
I am currently searching for some users so I can get feedback and enhance the product.😃
Check it out:(https://t.co/C0rzZLLOLJ)
Quality over quantity.
Working long hours doesn’t mean you’re productive.
Real progress happens in those 2 hour focus sessions.
Sure, long hours might feel productive but they just drain your brain.
4 hours with focus > 8 hours without it.