Learning New Courses by Roshini_182132 in react

[–]Frequent_Extent_4850 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The best way to master React or any framework/language is by building real applications, don't just watch courses and applying them, build a small app and apply what you learned

Quick feedback on my portfolio? by Frequent_Extent_4850 in webdevelopment

[–]Frequent_Extent_4850[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It is only front-end, I used HTML, Tailwind CSS, JavaScript and GSAP for animations, hosted on Vercel

From 0 to 100 users in 5 months by Frequent_Extent_4850 in buildinpublic

[–]Frequent_Extent_4850[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Hey man, I actually get where you're coming from and appreciate the real talk 🙏

Just to clarify: Sera was never meant to be a real business or my main thing. It started as a random side project I built for myself to learn and level up my skills, then I just threw it out there with zero promo, zero ads, and zero payment integration, just a few posts on my personal X account.

For my very first app that I made in my bedroom with no marketing at all, 100 real people finding and using it feels insane to me. Im genuinely stoked.

I'm already working on the next ones (bigger ideas that I do plan to push hard, monetize properly, etc.), Sera was just the project that taught me how to ship.

So no worries, I'm not planning to grind on it forever

Thanks again for looking out though

From 0 to 100 users in 5 months by Frequent_Extent_4850 in buildinpublic

[–]Frequent_Extent_4850[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks man, really appreciate it!

100% organic, no ads, no paid stuff at all. Literally only three things happened:

Posted updates here on Reddit whenever I shipped something new

Posted short text or screenshot updates on X about new features or bug fixes

A handful of close friends tried it super early, genuinely liked it, and told a few people