I believe collecting user feedback is one of the most important things you can do while building a product. I used to run a B2C app with 100k monthly users a couple years ago, and got so frustrated with existing solutions which were either too complicated or too expensive, that I ended up using a single Google Form. I don't need to tell you how tedious the process of going through all the answers was.
Fast forward to today, I sold that app, and for the last 5 months I've been working on Modu.io , a feedback collection tool that allows businesses and communities to create multiple kinds of feedback modules (suggestions with voting, roadmaps, changelogs, polls, ratings, open questions) and either organize them in a public board, link to them directly, or use them as in-app embeds/popups.
I'm David, and I built SheerFit - an AI fitness coach that actually remembers you
Unlike generic fitness apps, SheerFit uses multi-agent AI with persistent memory to track your goals, injuries, and progress across every conversation. It's like having a personal trainer who never forgets what you told them last week.
I'm Luqmaam (or Lathithaa on X @Lathithaa_Mdayi), solo indie maker from Cape Town, South Africa , building under Last Dices Pty Ltd.
I got fed up wasting hours (sometimes days) on the same repetitive setup every new project: copying .gitignore, writing READMEs from scratch, debugging Dockerfiles, setting up CI/CD workflows, adding licenses/.env examples... you know the drill.
We just launched a new app and now our main challenge is growth. I d love to hear what your first five marketing steps were after launch.
FaceAlarm is a face-tracking alarm that won t stop until you take a selfie. It helps you consistently capture your face and notice subtle changes over time Perfect for face yoga, self-massage, mewing, or anyone who wants to observe their facial transformation.
I'm Tharun, a solo founder from NYC. I just launched HelloAria on the iOS App Store it's an AI-powered productivity app that handles reminders, tasks, and calendar all in one place.
Instead of switching between Todoist, Notion, and Calendar, you just tell Aria what you need and it handles the rest. It understands natural language so you can say things like "remind me to follow up with client on Thursday at 2pm" and it just works.
Remember when a "location tracker" meant staring at a single, frustratingly vague dot on a map? That dot told you where, but never what or if.
Thankfully, the game has changed. The most useful tools today have evolved into intelligent safety platforms. They re less about constant surveillance and more about contextual awareness and proactive peace of mind.
Here s a look at the smart features that make modern trackers genuinely helpful: