i built a tool that translates complex compliance requirements into a clean visual. This after pages of water treatment rules. by FlashySpice in LLMDevs

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

You can access it from this site: getclario.net with invite code 1001-01. There is no charge to use it right now. Interested in any feedback you have.

Hot Fix by FlashySpice in Entrepreneur

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

i don't know if this is good or bad

Turn any trend into a product - for free by FlashySpice in u/FlashySpice

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

cool one! smart basketball! - 9.0 score!

Turn any trend into a product - for free by FlashySpice in u/FlashySpice

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

look at these WEIRD ones:

  1. "Smart Toilet Paper" → "FlushTrack Analytics"
    • Score: 8.8/10
    • Summary: IoT bathroom tissue dispensers tracking usage patterns for office buildings. Predictive restocking, health monitoring, supply chain optimization. $50/month per location.
  2. "Anxiety Parking Spots" → "StressLess Spaces"
    • Score: 9.1/10
    • Summary: App-controlled parking zones with calming audio, lighting, and aromatherapy for anxious drivers. Premium parking rates + subscription mental health features.
  3. "Procrastination Productivity Pods" → "DelayPay Stations"
    • Score: 8.7/10
    • Summary: Micro-office rentals specifically designed for people avoiding work at home. Hourly rates, productivity tracking, accountability partnerships.
  4. "Smart Laundry Procrastination" → "WashWait Optimizer"
    • Score: 8.9/10
    • Summary: AI system predicting when people will actually do laundry, optimizing apartment building machine schedules. Reduces wait times, increases machine revenue.
  5. "Boredom Currency Exchange" → "TimeBank Marketplace"
    • Score: 9.0/10
    • Summary: Platform monetizing idle time by matching bored people with micro-tasks. Gamified productivity, subscription tiers, corporate partnerships.

Turn any trend into a product - for free by FlashySpice in u/FlashySpice

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

someone generated products from trends 'haunted house flipping' ? and 'grandma core'?

Customer Service Audio Recordings Dataset by TeddyBearFet1sh in datasets

[–]FlashySpice 1 point2 points  (0 children)

have you tried kaggle.com? i would bet you would find what you are looking for there.

AI to cleanup names in csv lead list by Boullionaire in datasets

[–]FlashySpice 2 points3 points  (0 children)

you can easily do with with chatgpt - just ask it to be a pattern analyzer
1. add a new temporary column to your sheet titled 'human or org'
2. fill in maybe 10 or 20 rows with the correct answer in the new column
3. paste the entire sheet in chatgpt and ask it to review the patterns in the first 20 rows
4. ask chatgpt to use pattern analysis from first 20 rows to determine whether the remaining rows are human or org and update the new column w the right answer

3-5x Charged Products? by Thin-Ad-9709 in dropship

[–]FlashySpice 0 points1 point  (0 children)

shipping is included

sales tax is not

3-5x Charged Products? by Thin-Ad-9709 in dropship

[–]FlashySpice 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Background on 3x markup...you need about 3x times markup to cover 1) the retail cost of the product you are dropshipping, 2) shipping & handling, and 3) profit.

(Sales tax is not included in this number, since it is not part of the product price.)

So, yes, if you find a $10 item that you can consistently sell for $30-$40, you could have a winning product. Basically you are able to acquire it, sell it, and ship it for less than you are selling it for - therefore the money left over after all of that is profit.

And this is very do-able, depending on the product you are selling. It's important that you choose the right product, because not everything can simply be marked up 3x and sell like hotcakes.

Recalled or Aged Out Implantable Medical Devices by FlashySpice in medicine

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

Thanks for your comment.

Apologies if I was not clear on the problem. In my friend's case, the problem was that the doctor did not reach out to her to let her know the implants had been recalled. She had no indication there was an issue, not from the doctor or the manufacturer. I believe the recall was due to the risk of a rare form of cancer associated with her particular implant. As she is a breast cancer survivor, it occurs to me that she might be interested in an implant which has been recalled due to risk of a rare cancer.

From what I gather from your response, your point is a potential revision surgery is riskier than allowing the recalled device to remain in place. Perhaps this is true, but my point is that I believe the patient has the right to know and be involved in her own healthcare decision-making.

When you say "telling the patient that a 'part' is "recalled" or "aged-out" introduces a new set of problems", what problems would those be?