I ve been building products for a long time (15+ years), and I recently tried using v0.dev for the first time. Honestly didn t expect much, but I was surprised how quickly I got something real off the ground - not just a playground UI, but a fully working fitness app with protected routes, dashboards, flow logic, the works.
It s called The HIIT PIT and it s live, but that s not why I m posting.
I m more curious to hear from other devs and indie makers:
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:
Vercel is hosting its first-ever global Next.js hackathon, with credits from 25+ partners including @Anthropic @Clerk @Cursor @ElevenLabs @Resend @Supabase...
End-to-end encrypted file storage from Switzerland that lets you securely back up your files on the cloud, access them anywhere, and share them with anyone.
Forget the pitch deck for a second. This is about grabbing attention fast. Share your startup in five words or less. The goal is to be clear, clever, or just bold enough to make people stop scrolling. Who knows, it could be a good marketing exercise
Forget the pitch deck for a second. This is about grabbing attention fast. Share your startup in five words or less. The goal is to be clear, clever, or just bold enough to make people stop scrolling. Who knows, it could be a good marketing exercise
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:
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:
Qobuz is a music streaming service specializing in Hi-Res audio. It has a vast library spanning classical, jazz, pop, rock, and beyond—offered at up to 24-bit/192 kHz for crystal-clear listening.
I m just getting started on my SaaS journey and, like many beginners, I m facing the classic challenge choosing the right idea to work on.
I feel like I might be overthinking it. On one hand, I just need to dive in and build something to gain experience. But at the same time, I want to ensure I m working on a valuable idea with real potential.
I ve seen a lot of people jump straight into building an app without validating the idea first. Some succeed, but many end up realizing too late that there s little demand for their product.
Hope you're having a productive start to your week!
We've got another impressive lineup of Product of the Week winners to highlight. These innovative tools are solving real problems in creative ways:
Sider 5.0 by @Sider: ChatGPT sidebar Chrome extension
Sider 5.0 Deep Research mimics human research by auto-scanning 100+ sources, reflecting, noting and highlighting insights. It crafts expert-level, interactive reports in minutes. All findings are auto-saved to Wisebase AI knowledge base that evolves with you.
@Aha
Meet the world's first multi-agent team working on influencer marketing, with built-in scalability for any industry. Whether to increase brand awareness, drive sales or enhance business growth, Aha AI team delivers results that exceed expectations.
@Kintsugi
Kintsugi's AI-driven platform doesn't just simplify sales tax; it transforms it. From precise tax calculations and real-time exposure monitoring to seamless filing and remittance, we automate the entire sales tax lifecycle.
Twos PALs by @Twos
Personal Active Lists (PALs) take what you write and automatically create reminders/events, detect tasks, get product links, map directions, and 30+ more use-cases. "AI features that are genuinely helpful, not just gimmicks."
@Epiphany
Epiphany is the fastest, most frictionless way to capture your ideas with voice and create actions with them in tools like Notion, Asana, Todoist, Clickup, Obsidian, and more. Stop losing ideas to distraction, and start putting them to work.
Solo going with the best whois lookup app. Don't trust my words - check out yourself https://pluswhois.com/whois/plus...
its a free (for now), shareable domain lookup tool that makes checking WHOIS data a breeze. I built PlusWHOIS to help people quickly verify domain availability and gain deeper insights into domain registrations without the hassle. Excited to be here, learn from fellow makers, and share ideas. Let s connect and chat about building smart, data-driven products!
A few of us at Product Hunt are putting on our most brutally honest (but helpful!) hats and roasting landing pages for the next two days. Want in? Drop your link below, and we ll give you real, no-BS feedback on:
Clarity Does your message make sense or sound like corporate soup? Calls to Action Do we feel compelled to click, or just leave? Design & UX Smooth experience or rage quit territory? Anything else Tell us what you want feedback on.
Finding right data on the RAW dump whois json is tedious, you can't event click on the site name. Whois lookup for a domain is more than just json reading.
Hi Makers, We now have a discussions section - yay! This means it's even easier for us to share information, advice and support each other I lead on community management for Makers meaning it's my job to help all of you and ensure you're getting what you need from the community. I'm currently in London, England. Where in the world are you and what are you working on?
A new approach to build mobile apps using NativeScript. Other JS-Native frameworks like React-Native and Nativescript-Vue do the bulk of their work on the mobile device, Svelte Native shifts that work into a compile step that happens when you build your app.
ChatGPT Plus is available to customers in the United States, and we will begin the process of inviting people from our waitlist over the coming weeks.
Join Waitlist: https://bit.ly/3XWb4Ql