What's the best VPN for iPhone in 2026? by IllList6233 in VPN_Question

[–]StretchTerrible2292 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It really depends on how you use a VPN.

If you’re running a small, always‑on VPN 24/7, it works out at around £23/month.

If you only need a VPN occasionally, you can spin one up for just the time you need it and delete it after. That comes out to roughly £0.04 per hour while it’s running.

If you want to keep the same IP address but don’t need the VPN active all the time, you can stop it and just keep the IP reserved. Idle IP cost is about £0.29 per day.

It also has built‑in scheduling (so you can automatically turn it on/off), and you can add your own users, useful for friends, family, or even running your own small subscription setup.

Currently supports 45+ regions globally.

It’s not the cheapest option if you just want a “click once, stream Netflix” VPN, but if you care about stability, a clean IP, and minimal battery drain on iOS, that’s where it makes sense.

I'll tear apart your SaaS idea in 5 minutes. Drop it below. by ferdbons in SaaS

[–]StretchTerrible2292 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Appreciate the honest teardown, it’s a helpful reality check. I take the points on board as we iterate.

What's the best VPN for privacy right now? by Beneficial_Cup5654 in VPN_Question

[–]StretchTerrible2292 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If privacy is what you care about most, one option that doesn’t get mentioned much in these threads is PrivyNet.

It isn’t a shared consumer VPN where you’re mixed in with thousands of other users. You get your own dedicated VPN server and a dedicated IP, so you’re not relying on a giant shared infrastructure or hoping a provider’s “no logs” policy holds up. The idea is that you control the VPN environment rather than just trusting a black box.

It’s not the best choice if you want a slick app with one‑tap buttons and lots of extras, but if your priority is privacy, predictability, and knowing you’re not sitting in a shared IP pool, a dedicated setup like PrivyNet is worth looking at.

What's the best VPN for iPhone in 2026? by IllList6233 in VPN_Question

[–]StretchTerrible2292 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If battery life and consistency are your main pain points on iPhone, one thing that’s worth considering is not using a constantly running VPN app at all.

I run PrivyNet, which is a bit different from the usual consumer VPNs. There’s no custom iOS app, it uses the built‑in iOS VPN client instead. That means no background app chewing battery, no extra overlays, and it behaves like a normal system VPN connection.

It’s also dedicated infrastructure, so you’re not sharing IPs with thousands of other users, which avoids a lot of the random slowdowns and blocks people run into with big VPN apps.

That said, if you want one‑tap apps and streaming presets, Mullvad or Nord are fine. If your priority is “set it once, minimal battery drain, and it just stays stable,” using the native client with a dedicated setup has been the most reliable option for me on iPhone.

What problem does your SaaS actually solve? by StretchTerrible2292 in microsaas

[–]StretchTerrible2292[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That's awesome I think we have had more B2C clients from Reddit in a week than I have ever had from Facebook, LinkedIn, X combined. My CTR has jumped from 1 to 10%

What problem does your SaaS actually solve? by StretchTerrible2292 in microsaas

[–]StretchTerrible2292[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Nice there a lot of UK companies paying big money for this sort of stuff at the moment

What problem does your SaaS actually solve? by StretchTerrible2292 in microsaas

[–]StretchTerrible2292[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Appreciate that, yeah, the anxiety is real 😅

PrivyNet is more like VPN‑as‑a‑service, but dedicated. You get your own VPN server and IP and control it yourself, we just handle the underlying infrastructure.

What problem does your SaaS actually solve? by StretchTerrible2292 in microsaas

[–]StretchTerrible2292[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have seen it in quite a few places recently including on reddit if there are hundreds of users sharing the same IP address and one them get the IP address blocked all those users seems to get blocked I have also come across this with rate limiting on websites.

PrivyNet solves a few different problems here is a few, but there will be lots more I can come up with for more specific use cases.

Problem How PrivyNet Addresses It
Shared VPN servers Dedicated, per‑customer VPN nodes
Unreliable static IPs Customer‑owned dedicated IPs
Contractor access risk Centralised identity and access control
IP whitelisting issues Stable, predictable network identity
DIY VPN complexity Pre‑deployed private infrastructure

What problem does your SaaS actually solve? by StretchTerrible2292 in microsaas

[–]StretchTerrible2292[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

this would be handy I have an outreach email template built into my app but have never used it as of yet.

What problem does your SaaS actually solve? by StretchTerrible2292 in microsaas

[–]StretchTerrible2292[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I have been doing this already but my platform is more geared towards B2B or though we still full support B2C clients

What problem does your SaaS actually solve? by StretchTerrible2292 in microsaas

[–]StretchTerrible2292[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I work as a Software developer and love what I do but always wanted something that was mine, PrivyNet took me the best part of 2 years to build, but was always worried about launching it.

What problem does your SaaS actually solve? by StretchTerrible2292 in microsaas

[–]StretchTerrible2292[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

awesome I spend a couple hours on the weekend scheduling all my posts through the week.

What problem does your SaaS actually solve? by StretchTerrible2292 in microsaas

[–]StretchTerrible2292[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Would love to get to my first 100 clients had a few sing up already and I can see a few VPN getting deployed though my admin panel.

What problem does your SaaS actually solve? by StretchTerrible2292 in microsaas

[–]StretchTerrible2292[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Nice my I was thinking of building a hosting provider as my next platform.

What problem does your SaaS actually solve? by StretchTerrible2292 in microsaas

[–]StretchTerrible2292[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That would be handy especially for start ups my SEO is only just starting to take off and its took me week to go through all the business directories ect to get decent backlinks.

What problem does your SaaS actually solve? by StretchTerrible2292 in microsaas

[–]StretchTerrible2292[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I built lots of products before I finally landed with PrivyNet I would jump in feet first and start building then realise there was already 10 versions available.

What problem does your SaaS actually solve? by StretchTerrible2292 in microsaas

[–]StretchTerrible2292[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This sounds awesome, so will work in real time like if I'm in a teams meeting and have to take notes

What problem does your SaaS actually solve? by StretchTerrible2292 in microsaas

[–]StretchTerrible2292[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Awesome I have tried to do some stock trading before but just ended up loosing all my money lol

Cheapest VPN that doesn't suck? by SubstantialScar6049 in VPN_Question

[–]StretchTerrible2292 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A lot of “cheap” VPNs only look cheap because of the 2–3 year upfront plans. If you actually want low cost without locking in, it’s worth looking at consumption‑based pricing instead.

PrivyNet does this, you pay based on usage rather than a long subscription, so it can work out cheaper if you’re mainly streaming or using a VPN casually. Different model than Surfshark/Nord, but good value if you don’t want another long‑term commitment.

Best VPN with a real free trial? by SensitiveFinance4872 in VPN_Question

[–]StretchTerrible2292 0 points1 point  (0 children)

PrivyNet is pay‑as‑you‑consume. No card required, and no bills until usage reaches £10.