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Laiba Asgharleft a comment
I really connect with this. I don't want to label my product as great wither, I want users to do that for me. Every honest reaction teaches me something. If even one user feels helped, I know I'm building in the right direction.
Let your users define for your product
Mona TruongJoin the discussion
Laiba Asgharleft a comment
Honestly, the fortune-telling example sold me. I've seen the same thing, fun, narrow agents outperform "serious" ones. I like that you're building distribution instead of another framework. This feels close to how real products win.
I built a platform to validate that users actually want AI agents
ucmindJoin the discussion
Laiba Asgharleft a comment
I feel this deeply. Reviews often land when my attention is already fragmented. When a PR is clean, my brain slows down and I can actually think. Improving that starting poiint makes a real difference, not replacing judgment, just respecting it.
Code review competes for the same attention as everything else
Musa MollaJoin the discussion
Laiba Asgharleft a comment
This explains exactly what I experienced. I blamed myself for forgetting words but it was really the method. When I switched to spaced repetition, vocabulary finally stuck instead of disappearing after a few weeks.
You're not bad at learning vocabulary. You're using the wrong method. ☠️
Arjun ManochaJoin the discussion
Laiba Asgharleft a comment
This is exactly the kind of tool I've been wishig existed. I hate juggling multiple apps just to make simple release posts. The fact that Doccier understands the codebase directly feels powerful. I'm genuinely interested and already heading to the early access page.
A tool that generates release posts, visuals and documentation automatically
JuularJoin the discussion
