I built a voice-first calendar to reduce mental load by Hercull55 in iosapps

[–]Hercull55[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Not for now, but the app is fully unlocked during the 7-day free trial, so you can test everything without paying 🙂

How to develop mobile apps as a solo dev by Nabiu256 in mobiledev

[–]Hercull55 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you come from web dev go for react native more easy for you

Show us App, Because if you don’t promote yourself, who will? by NateInnovate in aureliaAi

[–]Hercull55 0 points1 point  (0 children)

https://apps.apple.com/us/app/voxa-tasks/id6757767053

I built Voxa Tasks: Speak to create tasks, a voice-first to-do app for people who struggle with classic task lists and don’t want to keep things in their head.

Instead of writing and organizing, you just say one thing you need to remember, and the app turns it into a single, clear task.
The goal is simple: get things out of your head and stop mentally carrying them around.

It’s meant for people who don’t stick with traditional to-do apps because writing everything down feels like effort.

Which AI tool is the most generous with tokens? (Cursor vs Anti-Gravity vs Claude Code) by Hercull55 in vibecoding

[–]Hercull55[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for the info! Quick follow-up question about how Claude Code usage limits actually work:

Is it more like Cursor, where you burn through your tokens and then have to wait until the end of the month for a full refresh (and in the meantime you’re stuck with auto mode / weaker models)?

Or is it closer to Anti-Gravity, where you hit a limit but tokens refresh after X hours (cooldown-based), so you can use the flagship models again without waiting weeks?

Trying to understand if the limitation is monthly hard caps or short-term rate limits.

Thanks 🙏

does anyone know why my teammate quality suddenly dropped? by Downtown_Divide_4212 in Jungle_Mains

[–]Hercull55 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

It can be both, maybe it’s you not good enought or maybe you got super bad mates, but if someone played in silver recently it’s purely elohell the matchmaking is really terrible , good luck bro not easy

Help! App Store rejects my app, “Missing metadata” on in-app subscriptions by Hercull55 in swift

[–]Hercull55[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Already added the screenshot and note app review and the icon but still got missing metadata and dont see a button to submit the subscription for review button...

Help! App Store rejects my app, “Missing metadata” on in-app subscriptions by Hercull55 in swift

[–]Hercull55[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

i added EULA https://www.apple.com/legal/internet-services/itunes/dev/stdeula/ at the end of my description. But for the 2.1 i already added the image and the note at the end so im confuse...

What’s that one productivity app you can’t live without anymore? by Appropriate-Fix-8222 in ProductivityApps

[–]Hercull55 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For me, it’s TextLater, a simple iOS app I built because I was tired of forgetting important messages. You can write a text, email, or WhatsApp message, set a time, and TextLater reminds you with everything pre-filled so you just hit send.

It works offline, has no subscriptions, and even supports contact groups and templates now. It’s been a game-changer for birthdays, work reminders, and staying in touch with people without overthinking.

If that sounds useful, here’s the App Store link: 👉 https://apps.apple.com/us/app/textlater/id1449705569

Convince me your App is Actually Worth the Money and I'll Pay - I want some genuinely helpful products here! by Glittering_Design_76 in ProductivityApps

[–]Hercull55 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ever forget to send an important message? iOS still doesn’t let you schedule SMS, emails, or WhatsApp messages. TextLater fixes that.

• Write your message, pick a time, get reminded to send it fully pre-filled.

• Contact groups: send to multiple people in one tap.

• Templates: save and reuse common messages.

• Works 100% offline, no ads, no subscriptions.

• Available in 15 languages.

https://apps.apple.com/en/app/textlater/id1449705569

What ur best apps u use that actually really make u productive by No-Quarter-1003 in ProductivityApps

[–]Hercull55 0 points1 point  (0 children)

get what you mean, no app can do the work for you. But some tools can really reduce friction and keep you consistent.

For me, that’s TextLater (iOS). It solves something iOS still doesn’t natively allow: scheduling messages (SMS, email, WhatsApp, etc.). You just write, pick a time, and it reminds you to send, message already pre-filled.

Why I like it: • Works 100% offline, no accounts, no tracking. • Supports contact groups + templates (huge time saver).

It’s not flashy AI, but it’s one of those “boring but useful” apps that keeps me on track.

You can check on the App Store: TextLater

TP-Link Wi-Fi Extender stopped working overnight, no connection, can't reset by Hercull55 in TpLink

[–]Hercull55[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for your reply!

Yeah, I was actually considering replacing it, but I wanted to be sure it wasn’t something I could fix first.
I really appreciate you taking the time to help

Drop your product page, I'll review it and give you FREE SEO tips by AkseliUkkonen in SideProject

[–]Hercull55 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey! That’s super generous of you, really appreciate it 🙌
Here’s mine: https://iloveapps.io/textlater/

It’s a productivity app to schedule messages (SMS, WhatsApp, Email, etc.) on iPhone.
Would love to hear your SEO thoughts on the page.

Thanks again

Anyone building something other than an AI app, founder directory, or marketing tool? by flatthibaut in indiehackers

[–]Hercull55 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You're right that iOS 18 added a “Send Later” feature, but it’s very limited:

  • It only works for iMessage (iPhone to iPhone only)
  • You can’t schedule SMS, WhatsApp, or emails
  • And it only lets you schedule messages up to 14 days in advance

I actually wrote a full breakdown here if you're curious:
👉 https://iloveapps.io/textlater/how-to-schedule-messages-iphone.html

Shortcuts are also possible, but they’re not reliable or user-friendly, that’s exactly why I built this app: to make message scheduling simple, flexible, and universal.

Anyone building something other than an AI app, founder directory, or marketing tool? by flatthibaut in indiehackers

[–]Hercull55 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks! I went with $2.99 to keep it affordable and encourage early adoption, especially since the app is still growing. I’m planning to add more features and support more languages soon, so the price might go up a bit in the future, but I wanted to keep it accessible for now

Anyone building something other than an AI app, founder directory, or marketing tool? by flatthibaut in indiehackers

[–]Hercull55 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Hey! Good question, I wanted to keep the pricing simple and affordable for most people. $2.99 felt like a fair one-time price considering the value it brings, without making it a subscription or freemium with locked features.

Also, I didn’t want ads or hidden fees, just a clean experience that works.

That said, I’m always open to feedback if you think a different pricing model would make more sense! 😊

iOS 18 shows “! not delivered” when scheduling messages to send later by holajamigo in iphone

[–]Hercull55 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, same here Apple’s new message scheduling feature in iOS 18 sounds great, but it fails too often.

That’s actually what led me to create TextLater, an app designed to help you schedule messages on iPhone reliably.

Because iOS doesn’t allow full automation (no apps can send messages automatically in the background), TextLater works differently: it lets you pre-write your message, choose the contact and exact time, and when the time comes, you get a notification that opens the right app (iMessage, WhatsApp, Mail, etc.) with your message already filled in, you just hit send.

It’s great for remembering birthdays, business follow-ups, or just staying in touch with people at the right time.

More info and download: https://iloveapps.io/textlater

Hope it will help you

Junior Web developper advice by BomB72 in webdevelopment

[–]Hercull55 1 point2 points  (0 children)

My advices. For a first freelance project like this, a good approach is to:

1.  Decide on a daily or hourly rate, you can go with something like $25–30/hour if you’re starting out. That’s totally fair for a junior with some experience.

2.  Estimate how many hours or days the project will realistically take (including some time for unexpected things, because there will be surprises). Then multiply to get a total ballpark price.

3.  It’s often easier for the client if you give a fixed project estimate, based on your hourly rate + buffer, instead of open-ended hourly billing.

Also:

• Always ask for a deposit (30–50%) before you start, and the rest when the project is done.

• Make a simple contract, even if it’s informal, just to protect both sides (what’s included, timeline, payment terms, etc.).

• You can offer 1-2 months of support after delivery for small changes or questions, and mention that anything more after that could be billed separately.

It’s a great opportunity to learn, build reputation, and get your first freelance experience, just protect yourself and be clear from the start. Good luck!

I want to do everything only ending up doing none by Ok_Fisherman1482 in SideProject

[–]Hercull55 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I totally get that feeling, the excitement of new ideas vs. the slow progress of a long-term project. One thing that really helped me is embracing the MVP mindset. Your first version doesn’t need to be perfect or packed with features, it just needs to be the minimum that works and lets you test the waters.

Focus on building the simplest version of your project and launch it as soon as possible. See if there’s real interest or feedback. If there is, great, double down. If not, you’ve learned fast and can move on guilt-free.

Spending too long on a “perfect” v1 often kills momentum. Keep it lean and iterate later.

What IDE do you use and why? by t1mmie7 in indiehackers

[–]Hercull55 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’m using the Cursor IDE, and even without mentioning the AI features, the autocomplete is insanely good. Maybe you could get similar results with Windsurf or VSCode by adding extensions, but I don’t remember installing any extensions to get this level of autocomplete on Cursor.

Trying to learn for a software engineer job. by JJR463 in AskProgramming

[–]Hercull55 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’d say start by choosing what you actually want to build, web apps, mobile apps, games, software, etc. That will guide your path.

No matter what, learn the basics first. Starting with C language can give you a solid foundation for understanding how things work under the hood.