We're a team of builders. Years ago, we co-founded a dev shop that became the core contractor for a major US company. We built their platform backbone. That company grew to 50,000+ contractors, valuation went 20x, crossed a billion dollars.
Something I've been thinking about as we're about to launch PostGod:
Most founders treat personal branding as "nice to have" while treating product development as "must have." However, investors, early customers, and potential hires check your LinkedIn before they engage with your product.
My co-founder and I are engineers. We didn't come from interior design. We came from software, and we kept asking the same naive question: why does turning a 2D floor plan into a photorealistic 3D render still take weeks and cost thousands?
I've been building Prompt Armour a browser extension that detects and redacts sensitive data in real-time inside ChatGPT, Gemini, and Claude before you hit send.
The problem: every time you paste code, emails, documents, or customer data into an AI chatbot, that data potentially gets stored, logged, or used for training. Most people don't think twice about it.
We all want our loved ones to be safe. Whether it's a teenager with their first smartphone, an aging parent who might get confused, or a family member on a solo trip, the worry is real. The idea of using a phone to check in on them can seem like a logical solution but it s quickly followed by a flood of questions. Is this even okay? How does it work? Am I crossing a line?