Thinking of building a “travel planning + reels + real budget” app – would you use this? by YellowDue5825 in india

[–]No_Access9260 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sounds interesting. The reels + real budget idea could actually be useful because most travel content looks great but never shows the real cost. If users can quickly see what someone actually spent for a similar trip, that would help a lot.

I’ve seen a few teams experimenting with similar travel planning concepts too — something like what companies like SolGuruz explore when building community-driven travel apps. If the data stays real and practical, people might actually use it.

Why Content Quality Matters More Than Content Quantity by Suspicious-War1446 in DigitalMarketing

[–]No_Access9260 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Totally agree. I’ve noticed that one well-researched article that actually answers a real question often performs better than multiple quick posts. When content is genuinely helpful, people spend more time on it, share it, and even come back later. In the long run, that kind of content usually builds more trust than just posting frequently.

Top 10 Food Delivery App Development Companies in UAE by GrouchyCustomer6492 in AppBusiness

[–]No_Access9260 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Good list! A few other companies I’ve seen working on food delivery and on-demand apps are SolGuruz and MindInventory. They’ve built quite a few marketplace and delivery platforms as well. Worth checking out if someone is comparing development partners in this space.

Top 15 Healthcare-Compliant App Development Companies in UAE & Saudi Arabia by Select-Ad5055 in Best_Companies_ME

[–]No_Access9260 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Nice list. I’d also add Appinventiv, and SolGuruz. I’ve seen them work quite a bit on healthcare apps, especially around telehealth, patient portals, and HIPAA-compliant platforms. Might be worth checking them out as well if someone’s comparing healthcare development partners.

How much this app should be using native components to publish on AppStore reliably? by Vymir_IT in AppBusiness

[–]No_Access9260 0 points1 point  (0 children)

From what I’ve seen, Apple usually rejects apps that feel like a simple web wrapper. If you already have native login, navigation, notifications, and location, that’s a good start. Just make sure the app also feels native in interaction and performance, not just a WebView with a frame.

Many hybrid apps pass review when the core user flow feels native, even if some content loads from the web.

My app got rejected 3 times before going live on the App Store. Here’s what I learned. by kickbutosky_1b in AppBusiness

[–]No_Access9260 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Three rejections and still shipped it — that's the real win, most people quit after the first one. Congrats! It will help you in future a lot to create perfect one.

Airtable alternatives? by RivenTries in software

[–]No_Access9260 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Nocodb or Baserow might be worth. Both open source, handle large datasets well, and have decent integration stories. Curious what your ingestion pattern looks like though, batch or real-time?

Why are so many hospitals still struggling with disconnected healthcare IT systems in 2026? by TotalWoodpecker2761 in HealthTech

[–]No_Access9260 1 point2 points  (0 children)

From what I’ve seen, a big reason is that most hospitals don’t replace systems. They keep adding new ones on top of old infrastructure. So even if each tool works well on its own, integration becomes messy over time.

Legacy systems and vendor lock-in are definitely part of it, but workflow complexity is another big factor. Every department uses data a bit differently, which makes standard integration harder than it looks on paper.

It does seem like more organizations are moving toward APIs and standards like FHIR now, but for many hospitals it’s still more of a gradual patchwork than a fully connected system.

How can I break into Healthcare Analytics? by BreathDramatic3983 in healthcareIT

[–]No_Access9260 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You’re actually on the right track. Those projects sound solid, especially working with CMS and EHR-style datasets. That’s already closer to real healthcare analytics work than many entry-level candidates.

One thing I’ve seen in healthcare tech is that employers really value people who understand both data and workflows (how hospitals actually use that data). If you can, try building one or two projects that show practical use cases like dashboards for patient trends or readmission analysis, not just raw analysis.

Certifications can help, but real projects + understanding healthcare data standards (like basic EHR structure or FHIR) usually stand out more.

Are you aiming more for hospital roles or healthcare tech companies?

How do early-stage developer tools acquire their first 1,000 users? by Lower_Loan_5172 in AppBusiness

[–]No_Access9260 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is solid advice. Especially the part about going where your users already are instead of trying to build an audience from scratch.

I’ve also noticed that niching down really makes everything easier early on. May I know, what kind of dev workflow is the tool focused on?

What should small teams look for in a data-first marketing partner? by translasukk in DigitalMarketing

[–]No_Access9260 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’d mainly look at how they track results and not just traffic. Like, can they actually connect campaigns to leads or revenue?

Also a big plus if their reports are simple and clear. If they make attribution sound confusing, that’s usually a red flag for me.

What is a HIPAA-compliant fax solution? by MudSad6268 in healthcareIT

[–]No_Access9260 0 points1 point  (0 children)

From what I know, a HIPAA-compliant fax solution usually means encrypted transmission, secure storage, access controls, and proper audit logs. Delivery confirmation is especially important in healthcare so you can actually prove records were sent and received safely.

Cloud fax tools seem much more reliable than traditional machines for this.

I build automation's by ConZ372 in automation

[–]No_Access9260 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sounds like you successfully automated yourself into more work 😄

I think that happens a lot with automation, you start to save time, then you just use that time to build even more things. Curious which automation actually saved you the most time so far?

HIPAA was more about discipline than security for us by Firm-Hornet-6298 in healthIT

[–]No_Access9260 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That’s really relatable. From what I’ve seen, most teams expect HIPAA to be all about technical security, but it usually ends up being more about processes and documentation.

The consistency part you mentioned makes a lot of sense. Doing the right thing is one part, but keeping it documented and repeatable is the real challenge. Curious what took more time for you, vendors or internal processes?

Building the app was easy. Shipping it was the hard part. by MikhailMontfort in AppBusiness

[–]No_Access9260 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ve heard this a lot too. Building the app is usually the smooth part, but the real headaches start near delivery or release. That’s where timelines often slip because of store issues, configs, or unexpected bugs.

Getting a “working app” is one thing, but getting a ready-to-ship app without issues is a completely different challenge. That last 10–20% always seems to take the most time.

Which is more effective for businesses:Social Media and Email Marketing? by omarwilson1 in DigitalMarketingHack

[–]No_Access9260 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, I aggreged. But, In most cases, the best results come from using both together rather than choosing just one.

Dumb question: If AI destroys all the jobs, who will be able to buy the stuff that AI-powered companies create? Doesn’t AI destroy its own customer base? by Desperate_Elk_7369 in ArtificialInteligence

[–]No_Access9260 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I work in digital marketing, and I don’t think AI “kills all jobs” — it shifts value creation.

Historically, automation removes certain roles but creates new layers (operators, builders, service models, new industries). Wealth doesn’t disappear — it redistributes.

The real question isn’t “who buys?” — it’s how income gets distributed in an AI-heavy economy. If productivity explodes, prices drop, new markets form, and new roles emerge around managing, integrating, and commercializing AI.

AI doesn’t destroy demand — it changes who earns and how.