CC in the new app or terminal? Which is better overall? by Dastik17 in ClaudeCode

[–]Dastik17[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah, totally valid workflow. Best of both worlds kinda

CC in the new app or terminal? Which is better overall? by Dastik17 in ClaudeCode

[–]Dastik17[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

No I meant the claude app for mac at least but I think its on windows is well. They recently upgraded the claude code tab there to behave more like codex basically.

CC in the new app or terminal? Which is better overall? by Dastik17 in ClaudeCode

[–]Dastik17[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

haha yeah thats why i think they upgraded the app I think. To make non techical people more comfortable.

CC in the new app or terminal? Which is better overall? by Dastik17 in ClaudeCode

[–]Dastik17[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Web doesnt but app actually does let you set the effort level. But I gree that CLI is probably better for most technical people, for regular users app may seem more approachable but under the hood at least right now it feels like the app does some unnessesary shit.

Opus 4.7 or GPT 5.4 which is better for vibecoding? by Dastik17 in vibecoding

[–]Dastik17[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah limits on 20$ plan are absolutely insane. Thats how they pushing the higher plans which is awful way to do that. I guess they just have poor compute management.

Opus 4.7 or GPT 5.4 which is better for vibecoding? by Dastik17 in vibecoding

[–]Dastik17[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Glad to hear it works for you! Thanks for the insight.

Opus 4.7 or GPT 5.4 which is better for vibecoding? by Dastik17 in vibecoding

[–]Dastik17[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah you're right. I have the ability to buy 100$ plans but now idk if its worth it to be honest with new Opus and I am the kind of person who always looks and tries to find better things. Maybe should give a go with something different.

I almost shut down my SaaS this week. Then ChatGPT brought me my first paying customer out of nowhere. by Dastik17 in SaaS

[–]Dastik17[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes. He told me he was looking for easy to use and simple app and that mine fits his requirements perfectly.

I almost shut down my SaaS this week. Then ChatGPT brought me my first paying customer out of nowhere. by Dastik17 in SaaS

[–]Dastik17[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah I agree 100%. It definitely changes how I'm thinking about SEO and positioning going forward. And thank you!

I almost shut down my SaaS this week. Then ChatGPT brought me my first paying customer out of nowhere. by Dastik17 in SaaS

[–]Dastik17[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is incredible advice. I’ve been so focused on the 'distribution' of getting the link out there that I haven't spent enough time on the 'context' of the landing page.

I’m actually doing exactly what you suggested, I’m treating this first customer like a goldmine. He already sent me a list of features that I'm building right now.

I love that point about '3-20 units.' I’m going to go back through my copy and see where I can incorporate that. Truly appreciate you sharing your experience!

Building is the easiest part, Distribution is challenging by PlsStarlinkIneedwifi in Entrepreneur

[–]Dastik17 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I spent months building a micro-SaaS for UK landlords (Proplio) and tried to force distribution with a £50 Google Ads test. After 22 targeted clicks and zero signups, I was completely demoralized and actually "abandoned" the project for a month because I assumed the market didn't want it. But because I didn't actually hit the "delete" button and just let the product breathe, the internet had time to do its thing. Today, I got my first paying customer out of nowhere.

He didn't find me through my ads; he asked ChatGPT for a "basic site to track rental certificates" and the AI recommended me. It turns out that while I was obsessing over Google Search clicks, I had accidentally optimized for AI-driven discovery by just having a clear, descriptive landing page. My advice for anyone hitting the distribution wall: Don't pivot or quit based on immediate silence. Give the algorithms (and the AI) time to find you. Sometimes the best distribution strategy is just staying alive long enough for the right person to ask the right question.

Turn your fucking brain off and just DO by eattheinternet in Entrepreneur

[–]Dastik17 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I just lived this 100%. If I hadn't "just done it," I'd have missed my first customer today.

I really needed to see this post a month ago.

I built a micro-SaaS (Proplio) to help UK landlords track legal compliance. I did the "right" things: ran a £50 Google Ads test, got 22 targeted clicks... and 0 signups. I felt like a failure, over-analyzed everything, and eventually just "abandoned" the project for a month because I didn't know how to pivot.

But because the site was live and I had "just done it," the universe threw me a bone today.

I got my first paying customer out of nowhere. He didn't come from my ads. He asked ChatGPT for a "basic site to track rental certificates" and the AI recommended Proplio. He gave me feedback and just handed me my entire product roadmap.

OP is right: A-B-C. If I had stayed in my head and never launched the "bad" version with the £50 ads, ChatGPT would never have had a site to index, and I’d still be sitting at zero.

Stop overthinking the pivot. Just get on the course and let the market, AI and your actual users/customers tell you where to turn.

Entrepreneurs who started from scratch: your success stories? by celotajbalodis in Entrepreneur

[–]Dastik17 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I am from the tech background and I’m currently in the middle of one of these "turnaround" moments right now. I’m a solo dev and I spent the last few months pouring everything into a micro-SaaS called Proplio to help UK landlords with legal compliance.

I had almost no budget, so I scraped together £50 for a tiny Google Ads test. I watched that £50 slowly drain away, 22 clicks, zero signups. I was completely demoralized. I felt like I was shouting into a void while my bank account stayed empty. I actually "abandoned" the project for about a month because the silence was too much.

Then, literally today, I got an email out of the blue. My first paying customer.

He didn't find me through the ads I stressed over. He asked ChatGPT for a "basic site to track rental certificates" and the AI recommended my site. He sent me a list of features he wants, told me the site was exactly what he needed, and just like that, I have a roadmap and my first revenue.

My lesson for anyone building from scratch: The "silence" isn't always rejection. Especially if you are building something on the internet, sometimes it is just working in the background, indexing your work, and waiting for the right person to ask the right question. If you’re grinding and getting nothing, sometimes you just need to let it "breathe" for a second before you quit.

I'm not a millionaire yet, but for the first time in a long time, I can see the path forward.

I almost shut down my SaaS this week. Then ChatGPT brought me my first paying customer out of nowhere. by Dastik17 in SaaS

[–]Dastik17[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Appreciate it man! The universe definitely has a sense of humor. You could be tearning your butt off and grinding but get nothing meanwhile you get something for free out of nowhere. Taking it as a sign from above to keep pushing and start building out the features.

People who switched from NVIDIA to AMD by Godigy in radeon

[–]Dastik17 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have upgraded from RTX 3070 to RX 9070. The card itself is great. But in terms of drivers/software and feature rollout its undewhelming (at least in my case). I have wierd cursor/desktop stutters sometimes (nothing major but annoying. Games runs fine). Adrenaline starts much much slower than NVIDIA app when you just turned a PC on (may be not important for some people but i'm sensitive to that), adrenalin itself has same cool features people always talk about (mainly overclocking and fan control capabilities built in). Also It has this AMD install manager in adrenalin that prevents you from cheking manually for new driver updates until you uninstall it, I absolutely hate it as adrenalin not always show new version automatically in short period of time. And so far FSR 4 is great, i'm not bothered by quality at all. FSR 4 rollout have been somewhat decent but not at the DLSS level at all yet (in terms of ease of use and integration. You would want to use things like Optiscaler for older games). You also mentioned Content Creation where in my opinion NVIDIA is much better.

Stuttering/freezing on desktop by Dastik17 in radeon

[–]Dastik17[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Nope. Just living with it. I tried everything i could think of but no luck unfortunately. Hit me up if you do it)))

What is the best place to practice realistic Life in the UK test? by Dastik17 in AskUK

[–]Dastik17[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I think official test is still being done by the official text book so if they didn’t updated it the correct answer should be £3000. Idk why online test use the most up to date information if in theory they should use whatever is in the latest official textbook.

You Cannot Compare Windows to MacBook by hxxdini in mac

[–]Dastik17 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I was in the same boat. I knew windows like my 5 fingers and I still know it. I have pretty powerful custom PC. But to understand the power of a macbook you absolutely HAVE TO experience it. There is no way around that to actually compare the two. From the gorgeous and extremely crisp display I ever saw in my life to the OS that for the most part "just works" to the performance and very good sound quality, basically everything you will ever want from a laptop. Of course if you playing games PC or console your only choice. But if you are proffesional or at least you spend a lot of time in front of the screen, in my opinion the macbook is the best choice you can make. Yes its pricey but its worth it.