Do you spend 3 hours trying to find a clever .com before writing a single line of code? Or do you ship the MVP and slap on whatever domain wasn t taken at the time?
Do you spend 3 hours trying to find a clever .com before writing a single line of code? Or do you ship the MVP and slap on whatever domain wasn t taken at the time?
I'm not going to give you the high energy launch spiel :P (I'm tired already, Ha!). I'm just here to share what I built, because honestly, I'm proud of it.
For years, my world was the LAMP stack. PHP, jQuery, a trusty MySQL database. I could build things with my eyes closed. But every time a project needed invoicing, I'd hit the same wall of tedious, frustrating work.
Every founder dreams of a big Product Hunt splash, top of the day, hundreds of upvotes, users flooding in. But here s what most don t realize: Product Hunt is not the place to validate your idea.
It s the place to amplify what s already working.
If you wait until launch day to show your product to the world, you ve already lost half the battle.
Whenever I m about to buy something (especially something more expensive), I can be easily influenced by recommendations from people I trust and know. That might be well-known accounts on X or suggestions from friends.
A dead-simple API that turns your JSON data into beautiful PDF invoices. No libraries, no tedious template coding. The simplicity you want, with all the features you need. Send JSON, get an invoice. Done.
AI coding tools seem to come in two main flavors: IDE-based, like @Cursor and @GitHub Copilot, and terminal-based setups, like using @Claude Code to generate commands, scripts, or entire files. Both have their fans, but which one actually helps you move faster?
Curious what flow people are sticking with long term, and where you see the most gains (or frustrations).
AI coding tools seem to come in two main flavors: IDE-based, like @Cursor and @GitHub Copilot, and terminal-based setups, like using @Claude Code to generate commands, scripts, or entire files. Both have their fans, but which one actually helps you move faster?
Curious what flow people are sticking with long term, and where you see the most gains (or frustrations).