AI dev tools are moving stupid fast. Every few weeks, there s a new must-use. Some stick. Most don t.
Some vibe coders are developing full products with @ChatGPT by OpenAI+ @Replit. Others swear by @Cursor + @Claude by Anthropic . A few are mixing @Lovable , @v0 by Vercel , and @bolt.new . New and shipping way faster than expected.
I ve been refining my own vibe stack lately. Building with @Google Antigravity at the core. It keeps the flow clean when things get messy.
For me, productivity means getting (more) results faster in less time. My goals for 2026 are closely linked to the fact that I want to learn a lot of things, which will require a lot of concentration.
Therefore, I think that a large part of what I want to gain will be ensured by:
70Lives is the all-in-one business app built for self-employed beauty professionals. Track income, expenses and receipts instantly. See real-time tax estimates and price treatments accurately. AI features include OCR receipt scanning and voice-to-text entry to log sales and costs effortlessly. Built by a tax professional for lash techs, nail techs, MUAs, PMU artists and salons - not a generic bookkeeping software!
On Twitter, I ve come across founders whose business was acquired at 18, which means they had to start even earlier. In some cases, it was at 16.
I ve also read about 14-year-olds building their first startup, and in some instances, even 10-year-olds. (At that point, I started to wonder whether it was truly the child s initiative or if the parent was creating the image of a successful founder at the child s expense.)
I'm excited to connect on other platforms and help each other grow our digital communities! Comment yours below ( : Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/groups/... Twitter: https://twitter.com/Netjet_io Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/company... Build your free website: https://www.netjet.io/en/
Let me know if you need support with your launch, I'll be there as a supportive community member! This is the best thing that's happened to me this year Thanks to the ProductHunt team for the honor.
I agree that the MVP is a journey, and not a one-time validation event, and that continuous iteration is necessary to refine the product into a competitive offering in existing markets. I found the emphasis on using a waitlist strategically to collect targeted feedback from specific tranches of early adopters a solid recommendation. Given this, it tracks that when you narrow your target audience, you can be more selective and intentional on how you deploy resources. By leveraging deep understanding of specific user needs, you can create significant value compared with the competition. Is this similar or different to your approach?
Hard decisions at the start of the week. A few years ago, the hard thing for me was "to start". Today, it is "to stop". What makes you stop? (besides bankruptcy and running your funds... hh)
What amount of time is needed to know if it makes sense to try to run that business? *God, give me a sign.
Bigger companies pay for SOC 2 certification to make sure that data are safe. The question is: Is it enough for you?
How possible do you protect yourself and your data from your side?
When someone clicks but doesn t buy, that s not a dead end. It s a clue. Maybe the product page was missing key info. Maybe the price caught them off guard. Your job? - Send a follow-up, Need more info? or Got questions? email.
- Talk about the features or benefits they might have overlooked. A no today could turn into a yes tomorrow with the right approach. Where did they drop off? What questions might they have? Find out where they hesitated and address it. A simple follow-up or a well-timed social post can turn doubt into trust. And trust into a sale.