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Kortyx - Your Personal Memory App for Every AI
Designers using Cursor, where are you all? 😇
Hello, PH!
I m a designer who boldly switched from Framer, which I had been loyal to for two years, to Cursor recently. This has been the best decision I ve made this year. The biggest reason is that the cost savings have been truly dramatic.
Cost comparison:
Framer:
Even the mini version costs $15 per month ($180 annually), and running 3 sites would cost $540 a year (if I had created with Framer, it would have added another $180, totaling $720).
Cursor:
Just $120 for an annual subscription! Unlimited projects possible. And there are no hidden costs or additional feature fees at all. The Cursor subscription fee covers everything. (I feel like I m advertising now;;;)
Besides the cost, here are the other benefits of Cursor for designers:
- Anything is possible beyond the features offered by Framer.
- No need for complicated tutorials or studying; you can use it right away.
- You can implement everything you imagine just with prompts.
I think I ll continue using Cursor, so I d love to connect with other designers. Is there a group for designers using Cursor?? I want to share good tips with designers who use Cursor!
📈 Traffic Numbers after a successful Product Hunt launch - Top 5 Product of The Day
Hi folks. Yesterday, I got featured with my latest app, and I made it to Top 5 Products of the day
I won't share my app's link here. That is not the goal. I just wanted to share some traffic numbers and insights, so you have a realistic expectation of traffic once you make it, too :)
(GMT+1)
- : +1.1k page views
- : +1k unique visitors
- : +1.6k views (how is it higher than landing page views? I still don't know)
- : 213 actual users
- : 4 HELL YEAH
- : 130$ (VERY RICH lol)
#vibecoding: What are your favorite Cursor pro-tips?
Recently stumbled across this Cursor pro-tip from Ian Nuttall on X:
"1. ask it to recommend a folder structure
2. ask it to actually create the folder/files based on that this makes it 10x easier for me to get started and Cursor is more accurate using codebase cos it knows where to update files."
That got me thinking, what other pro tips are people using to generate better code, ship faster, organise your space better, etc. Drop em below:
🚀 Launching on Product Hunt Soon? Drop Your Preview for Feedback!
Got a launch coming up? Don t go in blind share your upcoming Product Hunt launch here and get early feedback from fellow makers.
Whether you want thoughts on your:
Tagline or messaging
Screenshots or video
First comment
Timing or strategy
From quitting my job to 12,000+ trips being planned with my AI travel planner. Here's how I did it.
2.5 years ago, I quit my job with no backup plan. Today, I'm making a living from Tern, the AI travel planner I built in my bedroom. Here's the raw, unfiltered story of how it happened:
Numbers, Because Product Hunt Loves Data
12,000+ trips planned
Paying customers from 9 countries (started monetizing 2 months ago, still free for most users)
Users from 120 countries
5/5 stars on Product Hunt (and 1 of the 20 products hunted by CEO @rajiv_ayyangar )
$0 spent on marketing
14-hour days, 7 days/week in the beginning
400+ updates shipped
Experimenting with Cursor
At @Bucket, we're always looking for products that can boost productivity and inspire us to build better software. We recently experimented with @Cursor to replace @Github Copilot.
Key takeaways
Tab completion: Cursor includes a helpful tab completion feature, suggesting refactorings and improvements as you go huge time saver!
Chat: the chat/composer is better than Copilot as it can modify across files in the codebase. However, we still needed to correct the code most of the time :/
Full context: Cursor has full context, so it provides more helpful advice and changes
Generating comments: it makes it easier to add code comments they need clarifications from time to time tho
Working with existing codebases: Cursor seems better at writing code from scratch than contributing to large existing codebases
Hallucinations: as far as we can tell, it had fewer hallucinations compared to alternatives
Prompting strategies: being somewhat specific in prompts by referencing classes and functions seems to work well We're currently experimenting with `.cursorrules` files to improve prompt quality
UserWatch - Onboarding Drop-Offs? Convert them into Revenue
#vibecoding: What are your favorite Cursor pro-tips?
Recently stumbled across this Cursor pro-tip from Ian Nuttall on X:
"1. ask it to recommend a folder structure
2. ask it to actually create the folder/files based on that this makes it 10x easier for me to get started and Cursor is more accurate using codebase cos it knows where to update files."
That got me thinking, what other pro tips are people using to generate better code, ship faster, organise your space better, etc. Drop em below:
#vibecoding: What are your favorite Cursor pro-tips?
Recently stumbled across this Cursor pro-tip from Ian Nuttall on X:
"1. ask it to recommend a folder structure
2. ask it to actually create the folder/files based on that this makes it 10x easier for me to get started and Cursor is more accurate using codebase cos it knows where to update files."
That got me thinking, what other pro tips are people using to generate better code, ship faster, organise your space better, etc. Drop em below:
AMA w/ James & Tim (founders of posthog)
hey! we run posthog, the toolkit for building successful products - a single platform for building products, talking to users and shipping new features. we are 5 years old, have 140k customers and are making multiple $10s of millions of revenue.
no question's too weird. we're super transparent so will probs overshare anyway. plg? fundraising? yc? working with your cofounder? why we publicly document all our bad decisions? our allergy to enterprise sales? we've an open book so ask us anything!
AMA w/ James & Tim (founders of posthog)
hey! we run posthog, the toolkit for building successful products - a single platform for building products, talking to users and shipping new features. we are 5 years old, have 140k customers and are making multiple $10s of millions of revenue.
no question's too weird. we're super transparent so will probs overshare anyway. plg? fundraising? yc? working with your cofounder? why we publicly document all our bad decisions? our allergy to enterprise sales? we've an open book so ask us anything!
AMA w/ James & Tim (founders of posthog)
hey! we run posthog, the toolkit for building successful products - a single platform for building products, talking to users and shipping new features. we are 5 years old, have 140k customers and are making multiple $10s of millions of revenue.
no question's too weird. we're super transparent so will probs overshare anyway. plg? fundraising? yc? working with your cofounder? why we publicly document all our bad decisions? our allergy to enterprise sales? we've an open book so ask us anything!







