@GasChmberBadger@om_patel5@bcherny You're on point here. Opus says a week and then I will say do it now and gets done. Why the wasted time and unrealistic time estimates in this era of AI.
@ethanjaack Grok is doing very well bro. I am using the cheapest super fast reasoning and non-reasoning models both. It is very good. My app is just noob start level and I do not have the budget to go higher yet, so all is well for now.
Lesson 1 in making any AI powered app is that the app should not call any provider directly. Not even open router directly. Get a Hostinger instance to handle the proxy or maybe a Supabase function, that will handle the prompt and have it relay back.
For large text based expected outputs, Grok for example supports streaming texts. Supabase function or whatever you write, can and will support this streaming to the device. When streaming text, it gives the app a real good opportunity for special effects like it's being typed, etc with haptic feedback.
@seraleev Exhausted from all the MRR posts without a mention of what the cost was. What about MRP or MRR + MRE.
Making 1M MRR is easy if you have millions in ad budget even with toddlers in charge.
@grok is the best AI for any mobile app right now. Non-reasoning and reasoning super-fast models give way better results than OpenAI fast models. The only alternative that it compares to is Qwen, but Grok is still much better.
This is about throwing a bunch of health and fitness metrics from Apple HealthKit at Grok's cheapest and fastest reasoning model and expecting a proper analysis, and it works. When using the full Grok, it gives unbelievable results; it is scary.
I've had Ankora proxied in a way that I can switch models without needing an iOS update. The play and experimenting, while it did cost a bunch of money, I found that Grok is very far ahead in health and fitness analysis to the point it is at a certified medical level, and the fast models are just a mirror of the more expensive models.
The results from the cheap fast models and the expensive models are the almost same except that the cheap one is a second or two slower, and the reasoning and results, which I thought would be different for this particular use case, are almost the same.
Thanks @grok@elonmusk
The name Ankora is a word play with ancient Egyptian Ankh symbol (symbol for eternal life) and the word aura.
The first logo I had is a literal Ankh symbol. Lazy as hell. As a non-designer I relied on AI tools completely. The second design is a serif letter A folded up origami style to somehow represent a pyramid.
The third is again Claude refining it for more definition. There is a lot of potential for more iterations.
Ankora is here: https://t.co/9YcnOwUVUH