9MR

9MR

Motion graphic designer, and AI lover

About

I work in S.korea Advertisement industry as a Motion graphic designer. and I believe "AI will improve our workflow better than now.", So always try to adapt a High-tech AI system into traditional video workflow.

Badges

Tastemaker
Tastemaker
Gone streaking 10
Gone streaking 10
Gone streaking
Gone streaking
Gone streaking 5
Gone streaking 5

Maker History

  • Banano-Shot
    Banano-ShotLess Prompt, Detail Control: powered with Google Nano-banana
    Oct 2025
  • 🎉
    Joined Product HuntOctober 9th, 2025

Forums

9MR

3mo ago

Solo Dev’s First Launch: Banano-Shot Journey, Could You share Your Insights?

Hello I m 9MR, a solo developer from South Korea, crafting Banano-Shot (an AI image editor)during late nights while working a full-time job.
Launching it 2 weeks ago has been a wild ride, with many users engaging and great community interest.
I ve learned a lot from small ad experiments and your advice.
What challenges did you face with your first launch, and how did you overcome them?
I d love to hear your wisdom! For real.

fmerian

3mo ago

The State of Vibe Coding 2025 - Key Takeaways

The @v0 by Vercel team recently dug into industry trends to publish the first State of Vibe Coding report.

My key takeaways:

  1. Everyone can build: 63% of vibe coding users are non-developers, generating UIs (44%), full-stack apps (20%), and personal software (11%).

  2. Adoption is everywhere, with significant adoption rates in APAC (40.7%), Europe (18.1%), North America (13.9%), and LATAM (13.8%).

  3. 92% of US developers use AI coding tools every day

  4. 30% of new code at @Google is generated by AI

  5. 25% of @Y Combinator startups rely on AI-generated code

  6. Rapid expansion has a cost. Vibe coding apps keep hitting vulnerabilities: exposing secrets, access misconfigurations, hardcoded credentials.

  7. The future: going mainstream or hitting its sweet spot in working MVPs, the vibe coding trend is here to stay, and it's happening now.

Nika

3mo ago

What was your 1st product?

Sometimes I have a problem to have a look at my past milestones or things I have achieved so far.
When I think about it, even creating my first product was a success for me. I ve always been a bit shy and afraid to show what I was working on, or I just didn t know how to present it properly, so it took me a really long time.

My first product was an online workout program with a payment gateway, and the monthly price was ridiculously low. But I managed to monetise it and had my first customers. I was probably around 20 at the time.

  • What was your first product?

  • What would you do differently to maintain it and make it successful?

  • What lesson did you learn from it?

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