Every day, the PH feed is packed with shiny new SaaS tools most of them browser-based, many of them AI-infused. It s exciting, no doubt. But compared to a time not so long ago, something seems missing: local desktop apps.
They re rare now, and it makes me wonder are native apps still worth building, or have they quietly slipped into the realm of nostalgia?
After all, web apps offer clear benefits for both users and makers or investors. Users don t have to install anything, updates are seamless, and their data is accessible from any device with a browser. For investors, the advantages are just as compelling: a single tech stack, easier user onboarding, lock-in effects, and plenty of levers for driving growth and virality.
I'm curious how people build local-first apps. I don't need full CRDT support, but more just syncing with a "parent" db (both pulling new data and pushing locally created records). I see tinybase which feels maybe a bit more powerful than what I need (?).
I also see livestore which feels scary to build on something that new. Is there a non-hack way to use sqllite and sync to a postgres db? Basically my criteria in order of importance would be: 1. stays out of my way (easy to deploy, migrate, use) 2. has leverage with types (a standard linter tells me I'm blowing up the app with the code I just wrote) 3. stable (I would ideally just learn a "goto" tool and use that on all projects going forward)
Would you rather: Build with no-code or code it yourself?
Be honest: Are you team no-code for speed or team hand-coded for control? Personally, I think no-code is the future, that's why I am writing code for Paage.
I've noticed recently that YouTube are offering me very tempting free trials to upgrade to their ad-free version which also includes original premium content. While I was excited by the idea of ad-free YouTube when they announced the news a few years back, as a frugal person I never made the investment. Do you pay for ad-free YouTube, and if so, do you feel it's worth it?
With Disney + being released this coming week, it's becoming harder and harder to only have one subscription for premium entertainment. Share in the comments down below, which services you use and why!
Being a founder/builder is a lot of work and can take its toll on your health. What's your strategy for staying healthy? I'm a walker and can easily crank out 15+ miles a week, eat only plants and hit the gym 3-5x a week. What's yours?
It's almost the halfway mark and I would love to know some achievements you made that you are proud of. I got inspired thinking about how my year started and where I am now. The start of the year couldn't be worse. January and February were one bad thing after another. I was all caught up on the bad things but I started to reflect on the good so here are my achievements: - Got an awesome job with awesome people
- Held a session at a conference
- Read 3 books (as someone who never read anything)
- Got back to training, and am now in good shape
- Started waking up earlier
- Started creating content for LinkedIn
- Finished 4 exams
- Reconnected to old friends To some, these may seem small but to me, they are just the starting point to a great year.
The first 100 users is often the first big milestone when it comes to user acquisition. I've seen countless blogs, articles and of course Twitter threads about it, how did you get yours?
I have already subscribed, am a paid customer, heavy promoted the start-up in peer groups, referred couple of paid customers. So, besides these what do I give him? Any ideas and suggestions are welcome. Budget - under $100
As 2022 comes to an end, I thought it would be neat to share how we plan to maintain a healthy lifestyle in the new year. For me, I plan to continually cook and eat at home more frequently and move my body on a daily basis. If you are in need of accountability to make cooking and eating at home a habit, consider following @themealprepjar on Twitter to find out when we launch!
For those who celebrate, I'd love to hear about the present you love the most. For me it was my first *good* chef knife, partly because of just how good it is but mainly because of who it came from