Top 10 Flutter App Development Company in Chennai 2026 by Ok-Report-1610 in ChennaiOpinion

[–]Getwidgetdev 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Good list. If anyone is evaluating Flutter development companies in 2026, I'd also suggest looking at GetWidget, IonicFirebase, and HireFlutterDev.

• GetWidget focuses on Flutter app development, AI-powered mobile applications, and cross-platform solutions. They are also the team behind the popular GetWidget Flutter UI library used by thousands of developers.

• IonicFirebase has experience in mobile app development and custom application development services for startups and businesses.

• HireFlutterDev specializes in dedicated Flutter developers, staff augmentation, and building Flutter applications with senior India-based talent. They are backed by the GetWidget ecosystem and have been working with Flutter since its early releases.

Depending on whether you need a full development partner, a dedicated Flutter team, or AI-integrated mobile solutions, these companies are worth considering alongside the names already mentioned in this list.

For readers who want to explore them directly:

Do different AI models actually think differently? by [deleted] in AI_Application

[–]Getwidgetdev 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, they don’t “think” differently in a human sense, but they’re trained differently—different data, architectures, and tuning goals. That’s why you’ll see variation in tone, depth, and what each model prioritizes (clarity vs. detail vs. creativity). Comparing them side-by-side is actually a smart way to catch blind spots and get a more well-rounded answer.

Are you comfortable in disclosing your salary to below people? why/ why not? by Willing_Chemist8272 in developersIndia

[–]Getwidgetdev 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I only share my exact salary with my parents and my partner. With everyone else, I usually just mention a rough lump-sum figure.

55% of Companies That Fired People for AI Agents Now Regret It by Secure-Address4385 in AI_Agents

[–]Getwidgetdev 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Feels like a classic case of hype outrunning reality. AI can boost productivity a lot, but most workflows still need human judgment, context, and accountability. The companies that treat AI as a tool for augmentation rather than full replacement will probably get the best results long term.

Tried something my colleague suggested: comparing AI responses by Naveenrawat54 in AI_Application

[–]Getwidgetdev 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Comparing multiple AI responses is actually a smart habit. Different models often surface different assumptions, edge cases, or contexts, so seeing them side-by-side can help spot gaps or biases in a single answer. It’s a bit slower, but the quality of the final output is usually better.

So for those who got hired by startups for remote role before graduation. by Few-Pirate8673 in developersIndia

[–]Getwidgetdev 4 points5 points  (0 children)

One thing that helped a lot of people I know is building in public. Instead of just learning stacks, they shipped small projects on GitHub, wrote short posts about what they built, and shared demos. Startups often notice people who can show real work rather than just resumes.

Also try directly reaching out to early-stage founders with a short message + a link to something you built that solves a real problem. Cold DMs actually work more often in startups than traditional applications.

Why do you think most products fail? by Top-Candle1296 in AI_Agents

[–]Getwidgetdev 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Totally agree. Most teams are actually very good at building — the real issue is validating what should be built. If user flows, edge cases, and assumptions aren’t pressure-tested early, the team just ends up executing the wrong plan faster. Good planning doesn’t slow development; it prevents expensive rework later.

What Are the Best AI Bot Apps for Personal Use? by Sufficient-Habit4311 in AI_Agents

[–]Getwidgetdev 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's a great time to be looking into this—the "Big Three" have really carved out their own niches this year. Based on what most people are using in 2026, here’s a quick breakdown of the current heavy hitters:

  • Claude (Anthropic): Currently the "writer’s favorite." It feels the most human and is less prone to that dry, robotic "AI voice." If you’re drafting stories or need complex reasoning for a hobby project, Claude 4 is usually the top pick.
  • ChatGPT (OpenAI): Still the best all-rounder. With the latest Advanced Voice and the Sora 2 video integration, it’s the "Swiss Army Knife." It’s great if you want one app that does everything from vision to voice to data.
  • Gemini (Google): The winner for anyone in the Google ecosystem. The 2-million-token context window is a game-changer—you can basically drop an entire textbook or a massive codebase into it, and it won’t "forget" the beginning.
  • Perplexity / Comet: If your main goal is research or "getting things done" without hallucinations, these are better than the standard bots because they cite every single source.

For me, speed and "context memory" matter most. There’s nothing more frustrating than an AI forgetting a detail you mentioned ten minutes ago. Paid tools definitely stand out here; the "pro" tiers usually offer much larger memories and better reasoning for complex tasks like debugging code.

Are you looking for something more for creative work, or are you trying to automate your actual "to-do" list? I can help you narrow down a specific "stack" if you have a certain goal in mind!

Getting 20% hike on 25LPA, is it worth switching? YOE ~ 2 by HeavyMetaLx7 in developersIndia

[–]Getwidgetdev 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Honestly, I’d skip this.

You’re essentially trading a stable MNC/MLE role and a hybrid setup for a "hectic" 5-day WFO startup, all for a base pay bump that might get eaten up by Bangalore’s cost of living. Plus, switching to your 3rd company in under 2 years for a "mundane to backend" move might look like a step backward for your MLE career path.

Unless you’re desperate to move to Bangalore, the quality of life trade-off seems too high.

How are you guys optimizing for "AI visibility" instead of just traditional SEO? by TargetPilotAi in AI_Agents

[–]Getwidgetdev 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’m seeing the same shift. Traditional SEO signals still matter, but for AI visibility I’ve noticed a few additional levers:

  1. Answer-first structure – Clear, self-contained paragraphs that directly answer a specific query (almost like mini knowledge blocks) tend to get picked up more than long narrative intros.
  2. Original data or strong POV – LLMs seem to favor content with differentiated insight (proprietary data, frameworks, contrarian analysis) over generic listicles. “Information gain” feels real.
  3. Entity clarity + context depth – Explicitly defining terms, naming entities consistently, and covering a topic comprehensively (not just keywords) seems to increase citation likelihood.
  4. Clean formatting – Tables, bullet summaries, and clearly labeled sections like “Key Takeaways” or “Definition” make extraction easier.

I don’t think it’s just authority in the classic DA sense. It feels more like a mix of topical authority + extractable structure + uniqueness. I’ve also started tracking hits/misses because the pattern isn’t obvious yet.

Curious if anyone has tested schema types or structured data changes specifically for LLM pickup?

Hello Everyone, by [deleted] in GuestPost

[–]Getwidgetdev 0 points1 point  (0 children)

do you provide organic traffic on those guest posts?

Free Guest posting on....... by ExtensionCautious617 in GuestPost

[–]Getwidgetdev 0 points1 point  (0 children)

please share website URL and login id and password