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Oleksiy Kleft a comment
Love the simplicity here — “tools without the bloat” is a strong angle, especially for devs who just want things to work instantly. The client-side approach makes a lot of sense too. Speed tests and quick utilities shouldn’t feel heavier than the problem they’re solving. A couple of thoughts: • The value will compound based on which micro-tools you include. The more “daily annoyances” you...
Tired of ads? Me too. Here is the antidote.
Stefan VJoin the discussion
Oleksiy Kleft a comment
Fun concept — this sits right between party games and social apps, which is a tricky but interesting space. A few honest thoughts: The “play with friends + quick challenges + rewards” loop is strong. That’s what drives retention. But the risk is fragmentation — if users don’t quickly see active challenges or don’t have friends onboard, the app can feel empty. What I’d pay close attention to: •...
Play-On — The First Social Platform for Challenges (Canada-Only Beta)
Aviv YardenJoin the discussion
Oleksiy Kleft a comment
This is a really solid direction, especially the focus on structured feedback instead of random opinions. One thing we’ve seen working with early-stage founders is that the biggest problem isn’t just finding testers — it’s getting context-aware feedback. People click around, but they don’t always understand the product’s goal, so their feedback becomes noisy. Your idea of combining vetted...
Rising freshman at Babson building Probado Testing :)
Baltazar TorresJoin the discussion
Oleksiy Kleft a comment
This is seriously impressive work — especially pulling off real-time token streaming with a custom JNI bridge on-device. That’s not trivial at all. The positioning also hits a real nerve. “Personal AI” that depends on cloud + subscriptions is a contradiction, and you’re clearly leaning into privacy + independence as core values, not just features. A few thoughts from a product perspective: •...
I built MyLLM – a free, 100% offline AI app for iOS & Android
ChiranjibJoin the discussion
Oleksiy Kleft a comment
Interesting space — rugged IoT + real-world constraints is where a lot of “nice-looking” products usually fail. What stands out is the focus on actual field conditions (low power, remote environments, compliance). That’s hard to get right, especially when you move from pilot to scale. A couple of thoughts/questions: • How are you handling connectivity trade-offs (offline sync vs real-time)? •...
Hi from FlareHalo — building smarter water monitoring for remote and rugged environments
BruceJoin the discussion
Oleksiy Kleft a comment
This resonates a lot. Most bookkeeping tools feel like they were built for accountants, not for the people actually using them day to day. The focus on clarity, fair pricing, and UX is exactly where many of these products fail. Especially for freelancers — if logging income or expenses feels like a chore, people just avoid it. A couple of thoughts from a product perspective: • The biggest win...
Your freelance bookkeeper 🙂
nxnzeJoin the discussion
Oleksiy Kleft a comment
Hey Alyssa — that’s an impressive track record. Shipping 10+ products (and some of them reaching real traction) is no small thing. I’m curious about one pattern: How do you decide what deserves to be a full product vs. just a quick experiment? After a few builds, that decision becomes more important than the actual execution. Also — how do you personally handle the transition from “fun side...
I'm Alyssa X, a serial maker. I've built and shipped 10+ products. AMA.
Alyssa XJoin the discussion
Oleksiy Kleft a comment
This is a really interesting direction — moving from text-based AI to real-time video interaction feels like a natural next step. The “AI Twin you can actually talk to” is a strong hook. It’s much more engaging than chat, especially for creators who already build a personal connection with their audience. A couple of thoughts from a product perspective: • The onboarding for creators will be...
Introducing Twome: The First Real‑Time AI Video Social App
JeremyJoin the discussion
Oleksiy Kleft a comment
Nice concept — simple, focused tools like this often outperform “all-in-one” learning apps. The MCQ + instant feedback loop is a strong foundation, especially for exam prep. What will really define retention, though, is how personalized the experience becomes over time. For example, adaptive difficulty, spaced repetition, or even lightweight AI-based recommendations could make Quiz Mirror feel...
Discover Quiz Mirror – Your Ultimate MCQ Quiz & Study Companion!
Digital AuxilioJoin the discussion
Oleksiy Kleft a comment
This actually has potential — but the success will depend on execution, not the idea itself. The core hook is strong: turning normal hangouts into structured chaos. That taps into the same energy as party games like Jackbox, but in the real world. The key question is friction. If it takes too long to set up, explain rules, or upload proof, people will drop it fast. A few honest thoughts: • The...
Would you or your friends play this chaotic real-world challenge app?
Armando RuizJoin the discussion
Oleksiy Kleft a comment
Love the idea. “Learn and code with an AI tutor” is strong — but for Product Hunt, I’d push the outcome even more. Instead of focusing on AI, highlight the transformation: “Write real code on your phone with a tutor that fixes your mistakes in real time.” That’s clearer and more concrete. If you can, show a super short demo: open lesson → write code → AI explains mistake → fix → success. That...
🚀 Launching Soon: Skillhub: Learn & Code with AI tutors.
Henry AslanyanJoin the discussion
Oleksiy Kleft a comment
This is one of the most honest founder posts I’ve read in a while. Burning 60% of runway because of LLM costs is the part most AI builders don’t talk about publicly. Distribution is easy when demos go viral. Unit economics is where reality hits. The Paul Graham advice you quoted is timeless for a reason: Start with a small, specialized subset who will pay you. Do consulting if necessary, using...
This is how we're surviving against funded competitors for our vibe coding platform.
Ravi SojitraJoin the discussion
Oleksiy Kleft a comment
Love the focus here — a lot of time-tracking apps treat mobile as an afterthought, when in reality that’s where the “truth” often happens. A few thoughts from a product angle: 1️⃣ Mobile-first accuracy is underrated. Consultants, field teams, hybrid workers — they rarely remember exact hours at the end of the day. Real-time mobile logging (especially quick task switching) directly impacts billing...
actiTIME Mobile
JuliaJoin the discussion
Oleksiy Kleft a comment
Good breakdown — you’re already thinking about the right trade-offs 👍 A few practical points from what we see in real projects: Platform choice If this is your first educational app, the real question isn’t iOS vs Android — it’s who your first 1,000 users are. If you’re targeting schools, emerging markets, or broad accessibility → Android first often makes sense. If you’re targeting...
Oleksiy Kleft a comment
Really nice work, Haoran 👏 Love how you turned a learning challenge into a fully functional app — and in just about a month! That’s impressive. The concept of AI-assisted mindful eating feels both timely and genuinely useful. The natural language meal logging is a great touch — much more human than typical calorie trackers. As a mobile development team, we totally relate to what you said about...
I built an iOS wellness coach app in 30 days — here's what I learned
KevinWuJoin the discussion
Oleksiy Kleft a comment
Great work, team! 🎉 Love how @MyChat focuses on privacy and internal control — so many companies are looking for self-hosted, secure alternatives to mainstream messengers. The no-phone registration and local network support really stand out — perfect for enterprises with strict IT policies. We’ll definitely give it a try — looks like a solid tool for team collaboration and communication. 👏
MyChat self-hosted messenger without phone bind
Oleksii PikurovJoin the discussion
Oleksiy Kleft a comment
Nice launch — clean concept and super practical! 🚀 Tried Free Document Maker, and it’s surprisingly fast and smooth — love that it doesn’t require signup or show any watermarks. The AI tools + instant export combo makes it perfect for quick edits on the go. As a dev team, we really appreciate tools that respect users’ time and privacy. 🙌 Keep it up — this could easily become a go-to utility for...
Create, Edit & Convert Docs Online — Free Document Maker
Saddam Hosen (SHSaad)Join the discussion
Oleksiy Kleft a comment
Congrats on the launch, team! 🎉 Just checked out Editee.app — super smooth experience and impressive instant results. The ability to use multiple image references really stands out — that’s something most AI editors miss. As mobile developers, we appreciate how cleanly it works across web and mobile — great job optimizing the UI! 👏 One thought: have you considered adding a batch editing mode...
Oleksiy Kstarted a discussion
From Ukraine With Code: What It’s Like Building Apps During a War
When the world thinks of war, it rarely imagines software development. And yet, here we are — still coding, still shipping apps, still pushing updates. Not because it’s easy. But because we’re professionals. For us at Mobiwolf, software development isn’t just a job — it’s a responsibility we uphold no matter the circumstances. The War Changed Everything. And Nothing. Yes, the russian invasion...

