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

8mo 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.

9mo 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.

9mo 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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