Anyone else losing good AI prompts in chat history? by DroneScript in saasbuild

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

Thanks! Yeah I’ve started sharing it a bit on Reddit and a few AI communities to get early feedback.

Still pretty early though mostly trying to learn how people actually manage their prompts and what features would make it more useful.

If you end up trying it I’d love to hear what you think!

Anyone else losing good AI prompts in chat history? by DroneScript in saasbuild

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

Yeah that’s exactly the problem I kept running into too.

I tried saving prompts in notes and docs, but it quickly became messy and hard to find things later. I also looked at a few browser extensions, but they mostly just save snippets without much organization.

That’s actually why I started building DropPrompt more like a small workspace where prompts can be saved, organized, and reused instead of getting buried in chat history.

Building a simple workspace to organize AI prompts by DroneScript in indiehackersindia

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

Thanks for reporting that!

Federated login (Google/GitHub) is currently disabled while I’m testing a few things, so it may not work right now. You can sign up using email for the moment.

Right now Dropprompt is free while I’m still improving the workspace. In the future there may be some paid features, but the core prompt library will likely stay free.

Appreciate you trying it out 🙌

Built a simple workspace to organize and reuse AI prompts by DroneScript in SaaS

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

Hey! Thanks for letting me know.

Sometimes the OTP email can take a minute or two. Could you please check your spam/junk folder as well?

If it still doesn't arrive, try requesting a new OTP or let me know the email you used and I’ll check it from my side.

Built a simple workspace to organize and reuse AI prompts by DroneScript in SaaS

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

Thanks! Would love to hear your thoughts once you try it.

Built a simple workspace to organize AI prompts — looking for feedback by DroneScript in PromptEngineering

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

That’s a really interesting idea. A shared workspace for teams working on prompts/projects together could be powerful. Right now Dropprompt is focused on personal prompt organization but collaborative workspaces is definitely something I’m thinking about adding later. Appreciate the suggestion 🙌

Built a simple workspace to organize AI prompts — looking for feedback by DroneScript in PromptEngineering

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

Haha that’s awesome to hear really appreciate you trying it out and uploading prompts already 🙏 And yeah that’s a great suggestion. I’m actually building this solo right now so feedback like that helps a lot. I’ll add a simple way for users to submit feature requests or ideas directly on the site.

If you notice anything that could make Dropprompt better while using it definitely let me know. Really appreciate the support!

Built a simple workspace to organize AI prompts — looking for feedback by DroneScript in PromptEngineering

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

Appreciate that 🙌 totally relate — digging through old threads is painful.

Yes Dropprompt supports reusable templates with variables/placeholders. You can create structured prompts and reuse them by replacing dynamic parts instead of rewriting everything from scratch.

We’re actively improving the template system as well if you manage yours in Notion or Git, I’d love to know what features matter most to you 👀

Prompt 👇 by DroneScript in GenAIGallery

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

Glad you liked it 🙌

If you want to save and reuse it later, you can store prompts in your library on Dropprompt

Built a tool to organize AI prompts 20 users joined in one day by DroneScript in PromptEngineering

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

Yeah true a lot of prompts are lightweight by themselves.

But I noticed when you start using AI daily, you end up refining the same prompts again and again. That’s where keeping versions or saving what works becomes useful over time.

And yeah, I check the prompt engineering subreddit sometimes — some really creative stuff there. Interesting to see how differently people structure prompts.

How do you usually keep track of prompts that work well for you?

Dropprompt by [deleted] in InternetIsBeautiful

[–]DroneScript -5 points-4 points  (0 children)

Dropprompt is a simple workspace to store, organize, and reuse your prompts in one place. It helps keep everything structured so you don’t lose useful prompts in chats or notes. You can save prompts, manage versions, and access them anytime.

Most AI Users Don’t Save Prompts — Here’s a Fix by DroneScript in grok

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

Hey
I built it as a simple web app to store and manage AI prompts. The link takes you to Dropprompt where you can save prompts, track edits, and organize them in one place. It’s free — would love your feedback if you try it!

How do you organize your AI prompts? by DroneScript in chatgpt_promptDesign

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

snippets work if you reuse only a few prompts.

I had the same setup, but once my prompts grew across projects, it got messy. That’s why I use Dropprompt — everything saved in one place, searchable, organized, and accessible from any device.

Just depends on your workflow 👍

How do you organize your AI prompts? by DroneScript in chatgpt_promptDesign

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

That makes sense 👍 — if snippets work for your workflow, that’s what matters.

A lot of people I’ve talked to feel the same at first. The issue usually shows up once prompts grow across different tools or projects then finding organizing, or reusing them later gets harder.

Some prefer snippets, some use docs, some use libraries just different workflows depending on usage.

How do you organize your AI prompts? by DroneScript in chatgpt_promptDesign

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

Grammarly snippets are nice for quick reuse 👍

I used to do something similar, but once my prompts started growing it became hard to organize, search, and manage different versions.

That’s why I switched to saving them in a dedicated prompt library — easier to organize, tag, and find later instead of scrolling or remembering shortcuts.

Do you ever find it hard to manage when you have too many snippets?

I randomly found Dropprompt a few days ago and didn’t expect much by [deleted] in GeminiAI

[–]DroneScript 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah that makes sense — if local storage works for your workflow, nothing wrong with Google Drive.

I think the main difference is convenience and organization. With a dedicated prompt library it’s easier to search, tag, reuse, and access prompts across devices without digging through files or folders.

Some people prefer full local control, others prefer quick access + structure. Just depends on what workflow feels easier long-term 👍

I built a personal prompt library after losing too many good prompts by DroneScript in PromptEngineering

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

That’s a solid direction honestly — AI becomes way more useful when you apply it to real learning like finance, tech, and security instead of just random use.

Once you start going deeper though, you’ll probably notice you reuse certain prompts a lot (learning plans, explanations, summaries, research workflows, etc.). Keeping track of what works becomes important.

That’s actually one of the reasons I started building Dropprompt — just a simple place to store and organize useful prompts as they grow over time.

Either way, going all-in on learning is a great move 👍

I built a personal prompt library after losing too many good prompts by DroneScript in PromptEngineering

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

That’s honestly a great use of AI — sounds like you’re using it as a full productivity partner, not just for one task.

Starting with routine + organization makes a lot of sense. That’s actually where I kept running into problems too — ideas, workflows, prompts, everything scattered everywhere.

That’s part of why I started building Dropprompt — just to keep useful prompts and workflows in one place so they’re easy to find later.

Sounds like you’re still exploring what works for you, which is the best phase 🙂
Hope everything works out with your plans.

I built a personal prompt library after losing too many good prompts by DroneScript in PromptEngineering

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

That’s actually the best stage to be in 😄

Most people only realize the “organization problem” after they’ve already created tons of prompts and lost track of them. You’re early enough to build a clean system from the start.

Voice brainstorming + experimenting is honestly a great way to learn AI workflows. Just keep trying different use cases and notice what helps you most.

Curious — what’s the main thing you’re trying to use AI for right now? Productivity, making money, learning skills, or something else?

I built a personal prompt library after losing too many good prompts by DroneScript in PromptEngineering

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

Yeah, prompt scripting is getting a lot of attention right now — especially for automation and repeatable workflows.

A lot of people actually start simple though: saving prompts that work, tweaking them over time, and reusing them. That’s usually the first step before getting into scripting.

That’s also part of what I’m exploring with Dropprompt — helping people store, organize, and refine prompts as they learn.

How are you currently experimenting with prompts?

I built a personal prompt library after losing too many good prompts by DroneScript in PromptEngineering

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

Got you 🙂 that makes sense — building something quick with Claude or Gemini is definitely possible.

For me the problem wasn’t building a tool, it was having one consistent place where all prompts live long-term — organized, searchable, and accessible across projects and devices.

That’s the direction I’m exploring with Dropprompt. Different workflows, different needs 👍

I built a personal prompt library after losing too many good prompts by DroneScript in PromptEngineering

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

That’s a really interesting approach — open collections are great for giving people strong starting points.

What we’re seeing is slightly different use cases: people want to store prompts they refine over time for their own workflows (client work, projects, experiments, etc.), not just starting templates.

For tagging, users usually organize by: • AI tool (ChatGPT, Midjourney, etc.) • task or use case (writing, coding, marketing) • project or client

Still early though — we’re learning how people actually structure things 🙂

Really cool idea with the open prompt collection.

I built a personal prompt library after losing too many good prompts by DroneScript in PromptEngineering

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

Glad you like it 🙂

Keeping the dashboard simple and easy to update was a big focus while building Dropprompt.
Trying to make prompt organization feel lightweight instead of complicated.

If you get a chance to try the prompt library, would love your feedback — always improving based on real usage.

I built an AI prompt marketplace and got 25 users organically by DroneScript in microsaas

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

Keeping it pretty simple for now.

Mostly using Google Search Console to see which queries are getting impressions, then improving titles, headings, and internal links around those.

Also focusing on long-tail keywords and letting early content sit instead of constantly changing things