Posts tagged with #your

7 discussions found

LetsCodeTogetherLetsCodeTogether Builder7/5/2026

New Board Game

Immerse yourself in the world of historical strategy by selecting the "Play with Computer" option and engaging in a game that once entertained kings, among the 31 free board games available.

2 upvotes💬 0 commentsIdea
SanjanaSanjana Innovator6/26/2026

My boyfriend made an accidental product that I now use everyday

I don’t know how common this is for everyone else but, my boyfriend made a voice to text application for me. I work with Claude a lot, and what I find is that when I am using my voice it’s really slow and doesn’t get it right. It doesn’t get the punctuations or if it’s a question, or anything like that and it’s so slow. So he built this lightweight app that sits locally on my computer and I use it for everything. It’s lightning fast, it gets my voice and hardly gets it wrong and the best part - I just recently put in a feature request (lol) to read text back to me, because sometimes I have heavy documents that I just want to be narrated to. And he shipped it! Anyway, I realise that I have been using it literally every single day. I’ve completely moved from typing to just speaking to my computer. I suspect the future will be full of micro apps like this, tailored for you & your personal workflow! Not sure where he wants to take it, but still I’m a very happy user :) How are you guys working these days? Voice or typing?

7 upvotes💬 1 commentsStartup
Cartoon AnimesCartoon Animes Innovator6/26/2026

A "panic button" budget tool for sudden income drops

51% of U.S. adults have had an unexpected money emergency in the last five years (Yahoo Finance) . Idea: a tool that takes your current budget and instantly tells you which categories to cut first and by how much, the moment income drops or an emergency hits — instead of generic "build an emergency fund" advice that doesn't help once you're already in the gap.

3 upvotes💬 0 commentsProblem
Matthew OzoroskiMatthew Ozoroski Innovator6/25/2026

Would you pay to get your first power user and have a conversation with them?

I worked on Test4Test.io for a couple months. It's a free user testing site where founders can exchange feedback quickly. I made a test-back and quality assurance system, so if you test, you'll get back the time you put in. However, a lot of users don't wanna test. They just want free feedback. It was surprising really. So, I came up with a new app called PrimalUsers. We'll find your first users in the wild, forums, Reddit, Facebook, Instagram, etc. and we'll have them try your app for the first time and fall in love. Or, I'm thinking about doing more of a user research/video interview take. Maybe both. We'll send you screenshots of our conversation and their profile. Would you actually pay for a super user? And why would you want a super user (grow users, get feedback, figure out what to build, better messaging, gain insights or something else)?

7 upvotes💬 1 commentsIdea
Aditya PatilAditya Patil Innovator6/25/2026

NEW JOURNEY

DevOps teams: How much of your AWS bill is actually storage you don't use? Most infrastructure teams don't have visibility into S3 waste. It's not because they're negligent—it's because AWS doesn't make it easy to identify. We've built WasteNot to solve this. One read-only IAM role. One scan. Instant visibility into your storage waste. The results are usually shocking: • Old backups nobody cleans up • Duplicate files scattered across 50+ buckets • Test data from 2022 still sitting in prod Average customer: $5,000/month in unnecessary storage costs. Early access pricing: $99/month lifetime (First 50 customers only. Regular: $299/month) → Join the waitlist: [link] Launching September 2026. For DevOps engineers, CTOs, and Finance teams tired of AWS surprises in their monthly bill. #DevOps #AWS #CloudCost #Infrastructure #CloudEngineering

10 upvotes💬 2 commentsIdea
Trilok KumarTrilok Kumar Innovator6/25/2026

AI Study Planner That Builds Your Entire Preparation Plan From Your Exam Date

Most study planners expect you to decide what to study every day. What if you simply entered your **exam date**, selected your **subjects and syllabus**, and the app did everything else? The app would: <li data-section-id="198b12" data-start="311" data-end="360"> 📅 Create a personalized day-by-day study plan. </li> <li data-section-id="1rtc6bf" data-start="361" data-end="415"> 🎯 Prioritize weak topics based on your performance. </li> <li data-section-id="f4rocm" data-start="416" data-end="474"> 🔄 Automatically adjust your schedule if you miss a day. </li> <li data-section-id="7ssko2" data-start="475" data-end="534"> ⏱️ Balance study sessions with breaks to prevent burnout. </li> <li data-section-id="iadgvi" data-start="535" data-end="588"> 📊 Track progress and estimate your exam readiness. </li> <li data-section-id="bbd2ge" data-start="589" data-end="663"> 📝 Generate revision schedules, mock tests, and last-minute crash plans. </li> Instead of asking, **"What should I study today?"**, the app tells you exactly what to study, for how long, and when to revise—adapting as your preparation changes. **Would a tool like this make exam preparation less stressful? What feature would you add?**

9 upvotes💬 0 commentsIdea
AnmolAnmol Innovator6/25/2026

What If Your Todo App Actually Knew Your Day?

The biggest problem I keep seeing with todo lists, time-blocking apps, and reminder tools is that they operate in isolation. They don't understand your existing commitments—meetings, calendar events, recurring obligations, or plans you've made weeks or months in advance. They simply keep adding tasks without considering whether you actually have time to do them. When your day changes, there's no intelligent recovery. Miss one task, and the rest of your schedule falls apart. They also do nothing to protect your focus by blocking distractions when it's time to execute. What if productivity software became context-aware? Imagine an app that understands your calendar, adapts your tasks around real-life commitments, automatically reschedules missed work, predicts the best time to focus, and even minimizes distractions during deep work sessions. Instead of just managing tasks, it manages your time, attention, and commitments—helping you actually get things done, not just organize them.

9 upvotes💬 2 commentsIdea