I built my first public product entirely by vibe coding.
No Figma-to-code handoff.
No sprint planning.
Just me, AI, and a clear vision.
It's called Yalp. And it solves a problem every developer/vibe-coder knows too well.
You're deep in flow inside Cursor, Claude Code, or Windsurf.
A thought hits you.
A bug to revisit, a grocery item, a feature idea.
What do you do?
You open Notion. Or Apple Notes. Or Slack yourself a message.
And just like that, your focus is gone.
Yalp lets you capture thoughts without leaving your IDE or CLI.
→ Project notes while you code
→ Personal to-dos that pop into your head
→ Even your grocery list (yes, really)
It works through MCP, so it plugs right into the AI-native tools you already use. Cursor, Claude, Windsurf, or your terminal.
No context switching. No tab hopping. No broken flow.
I fully vibe-coded this from zero.
Designed it to be focused, clean, and sharp.
The kind of tool I wished existed. So I made it.
WhatsApp and Telegram bots, Chrome extensions, and other features are coming soon.
However, I'm curious.
I would love to hear about your specific needs. Please specify your requests in the comments, and I will prioritize them.
#buildinpublic
https://t.co/6t24E2XWSr
I lost focus 12 times yesterday. Not because of Slack, because of my todo app.
This one question started it all.
Why do I have to leave everything to remember something?
I spend hours in Cursor.
Switching between MCP skills. Building. Designing. Researching.
Everything feels within reach.
Then a thought hits me. A next step for the product, a grocery item, a quick research note.
And suddenly I need to open a separate app, create a todo, and come back.
Focus broken.
I used Superlist for simple to-dos.
But every time I switched to it, I lost my flow.
So I built what I've needed for a long time.
A minimal, modern todo app that lets you create todos
directly from Cursor, Claude Code, or any AI tool. Via MCP.
Working on a feature? Prompt your todo.
Researching something? Prompt your todo.
Remembered you need milk? Prompt your todo.
It shows up in your app instantly.
You never leave where you are.
WhatsApp bot, Telegram bot, Gmail and Calendar integrations coming soon.
If you want to manage your todos without breaking your flow
while vibe coding, building products, or doing research...
Drop 𝗬𝗮𝗹𝗽 𝗔𝗜 in the comments.
I'll get you early access.
#aitools #MCP #cursor #buildinpublic #claude
3 components. 3 lessons. 0 tutorials - just building.
I shipped 3 open source components instead.
I've been deep in this space for weeks - not just reading, but building.
So I created Harman UI, a project where I publish components you can actually use in your products.
Here's what I shipped:
→ Slider Nav Button - a carousel nav with a center-divider animation that slides on hover
→ Prompt Input - a production-ready AI prompt interface component
→ Slider One Component - a clean, drop-in slider built for real products
What made this process genuinely exciting:
You have to hold UI, animation, accessibility, and technical edge cases in your head, all at once.
That tension is exactly what design engineering is about.
It's not just "make it look good."
It's not just "make it work."
It's both. At the same time. With taste.
I'm using Harman UI as my practice ground, shipping components you can actually drop into your product while I sharpen this craft.
What's one example of design engineering that made you stop and think — "this person cared about the craft"?
(Links in below 👇)
Most UI components have no taste.
They work. They function. They check a box.
But they don't feel like anything.
I built a React slider that's different.
Not because it does more.
Because it cares about the details, you almost don't notice:
→ A thumb that glides, not jumps
→ A progress bar that breathes with your drag
→ A floating label that follows like a shadow
→ Click the track - watch it ease into place
Taste isn't about adding more.
It's about making less feel intentional.
This is a single component.
One install. One import. Done.
The best interfaces don't ask you to think.
They feel right - the way a perfectly weighted door handle does.
That's the bar. That's the taste.
Try it → link in the first comment.
What's the most "tasteful" UI detail you've seen in a product recently?