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Anushka Hodeleft a comment
Very Relatable, One habit that’s saved me a lot of stress: I never save card details on tools I’m just testing, even if it means typing them again later. It’s a small friction, but it’s stopped a few “wait, why was I charged?” moments. Also +1 to separate emails that alone keeps so much noise away from important stuff.
Anushka Hodeleft a comment
Honestly, I relate to this a lot. Earlier, low engagement felt personal, like the post said something about me, not the idea. Over time, I realised most “flops” aren’t failures, they’re just… timing mismatches. Some posts I almost deleted actually helped me later, not because they went viral, but because they showed me what worked and what didn’t. Which lines made sense. Which ones didn’t land....
+1 commentAnushka Hodeleft a comment
In my school, the toppers did well, but in the exact ways everyone expected them to. The real surprises came from the ones no one really noticed, they ended up finding their own weird, wonderful paths in life.
TinyCommand brings your forms, workflows, data, emails, and AI agents together, so everything connects and runs on its own. Build smarter, automate faster, and manage it all in one no-code platform.

TinyCommandStop duct-taping tools. Run everything with one command.
Anushka Hodeleft a comment
I’ve actually started appreciating the “boring” ideas a lot more lately. They may not look exciting, but the problems are real and the users genuinely care. If the demand is clear, I’d pick that over something flashy, it feels a lot more grounded.
Anushka Hodeleft a comment
Yeah, I’ve been feeling this shift too. Things don’t feel as random anymore. For me, the biggest change is how much better AI gets when the instructions are clear it actually follows through now instead of drifting off.
One of the best signs of progress in AI is how predictable good work is becoming
Musa MollaJoin the discussion
Anushka Hodeleft a comment
I think this happens to a lot of us. Learning feels productive, so it’s easy to stay stuck there. But what I’ve noticed is… things only make sense once you actually start doing. I don’t have a fixed ratio, but I try to catch myself when I’m “researching” just to avoid the real work. That’s usually the signal to switch to action.
Anushka Hodeleft a comment
That slow phase feels uncomfortable, but I’m starting to think it’s actually part of the process. I don’t have a perfect way through it, but what I’m thinking is… maybe this is the phase where things get clearer, even if it doesn’t feel like progress on the outside.
The Loneliest Part of Building: When Momentum Slows Down
Victor NJoin the discussion
Anushka Hodeleft a comment
I feel like lifetime deals make sense only in the beginning, when you’re trying to get early users and build some trust. But once the product starts growing, subscriptions usually keep things healthier, you’re updating, fixing, improving all the time. I don’t think lifetime will disappear, but it’ll stay as an early-stage thing rather than a long-term model.
Anushka Hodeleft a comment
I feel like personal brands will matter more, but not in a “post every day” way. It’s more about letting people see how you think once in a while. Deep skills still matter the most the brand just helps people find you faster. Quiet experts will always have space, they just take a different route.
Anushka Hodeleft a comment
Congrats on the launch! This is such a refreshing idea, it actually makes history feel alive instead of just something we read in textbooks. The 3D map + timeline combo is super immersive. One thing I’m curious about: with so many events loaded in, which category did people explore the most during your beta battles, philosophers, or inventions?

Globe of HistoryInteractive 3D globe visualizing 6,000 years of history.
Anushka Hodeleft a comment
Congrats on the launch! The interface looks really calm and approachable. which integration tends to be the starting point for most users?

Querri 2.0 Natural‑language data analysis with instant visuals
Anushka Hodeleft a comment
SEO is great, but it’s slow in the early days. What helped me get early users was simply talking to people where real conversations were already happening no hacks, just honest sharing about what I was building and why Sometimes that works faster than any growth tactic.
🚀 Product Launch Pain Point: How Did You Acquire Your First Users for Your AI Product?
Mu JoeJoin the discussion

