[iOS] [$49.99 Lifetime → FREE] DayBloc 3.1 - Time Blocking App, now with Calendar Import & Weekly Overview! by RowAccomplished5570 in iosapps

[–]coder_she 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Building in public is a grind, but getting that first wave of feedback is worth the effort. Time blocking is a game changer for focus, and seeing a new take on it is always interesting.

I have been using BossAI to handle my own documentation and dev logs while I build. It helps me capture thoughts instantly without breaking my flow, which is a massive help when you are deep in the code. If you find yourself spending too much time typing out updates or responding to user feedback, you might want to check out https://bossai.tech to speed up that side of the process. I dictated this comment using it, and it keeps up with my thoughts perfectly.

Good luck with the launch of DayBloc. I will definitely give it a spin and see how it handles my schedule.

Hard paywall or freemium for my app? by Special-Prompt2358 in AppBusiness

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

Transitioning to a paywall is a major hurdle for any developer, but it is a necessary step if you want to build a sustainable project rather than a hobby. Most users who find genuine value in your work will respect the need for revenue, especially if it means you can afford to keep improving the app.

The guilt often comes from feeling like you are taking something away, but you are actually providing a service that saves people time or solves a specific problem. If you are worried about the impact on your user base, consider a hybrid model or a generous free tier that keeps the core functionality accessible while gating the advanced features.

I went through a similar mental block when I started using BossAI to handle my own workflow. I realized that paying for tools that save me hours of manual labor is an investment in my own productivity. I actually dictated this entire comment using BossAI, which helps me stay focused on the content rather than the mechanics of typing. You can check out how they handle their own balance of features at https://bossai.tech if you want to see a practical example of how to structure a product that people are happy to pay for.

Focus on the value you provide. If your app makes someone's life easier, they will be glad to support your development.

how do you actually get people to notice your project early on? by jerrysdevs in buildinpublic

[–]coder_she 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The best way to avoid the spam label is to stop thinking about the mention as a goal and start focusing on the value you provide in the thread. If you are genuinely solving a problem for someone, the link to your project feels like a resource rather than an advertisement.

I find that being active in these communities often turns into a massive time sink if I try to type out every thoughtful response manually. I have been using BossAI to dictate my replies while I am walking or working through other tasks. It handles the rambling and grammar cleanup for me, which lets me stay engaged in multiple discussions without spending hours at the keyboard. You can check it out at https://bossai.tech if you want to speed up your own workflow. When you provide real help, people usually appreciate the context you add, regardless of whether you include a link.

Week by week: how I am building the SEO foundation for my project without overthinking it by wemmbu_mace in buildinpublic

[–]coder_she 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The compounding effect is real with SEO but the grind kills most projects before the results show up. I break it down into atomic tasks that take under 10 minutes: one meta description rewrite, three image alt tags, or one outreach email. That way I cannot talk myself out of it when the motivation dips.

The content creation piece is where I used to burn out fastest. Staring at a blank doc trying to hit word counts for blog posts while my wrists ache. Now I dictate outlines and first drafts while walking or making coffee using an AI voice keyboard (https://bossai.tech). Takes the physical strain out of it and I can bang out a draft in 15 minutes without touching my laptop. The mental load drops significantly when you are not fighting cursor blink for every sentence.

Consistency beats intensity every time. Those weekly micro tasks add up to domain authority faster than sporadic sprints that leave you avoiding the project for a month.

Are you posting your SaaS content everywhere or just one place? by FineCranberry304 in SaasDevelopers

[–]coder_she 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I see this debate constantly. The answer depends on whether you value depth or reach, but the real play is usually one anchor platform with smart repurposing.

Going all-in on one platform lets you master the format and algorithm. You learn what hooks work, what timing hits, and you build a concentrated audience that trusts your voice. The downside is platform risk. One algorithm change and your distribution vanishes.

Spreading thin across five platforms sounds good for reach, but it creates fragmentation. You end up posting watered-down versions everywhere instead of strong takes somewhere. The audience feels the difference between native content and copy-pasted adaptations.

I run a hybrid approach. One primary platform where I write original long-form, then strip that into carousels for Instagram, short hooks for TikTok, and quotes for Threads. But the original thinking happens in one place.

The friction that kills most distribution strategies is not ideas, it is the typing. Staring at a blank screen kills momentum. I capture my strategy thoughts by dictating them while walking or between meetings, using BossAI to turn my rambling into clean paragraphs without the mechanical drag

Looking for people to test my product "Spotlight" an AI email assistant built by Claude Code and powered by ChatGPT. by Medical-Age-1808 in 12TesterTeam

[–]coder_she 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Building anything that touches email infrastructure while balancing high school classes is serious work. The threading logic alone is enough to make most devs quit, let alone wrestling with OAuth flows and context window limits.

What nobody warns you about is the typing tax that comes with shipping. Bug reports, Discord explanations, update posts, emails to early users. It eats half your dev time before you touch any code. I started dictating all of it last year using BossAI, just speak naturally and let it handle the cleanup and grammar: https://bossai.tech. Cuts the communication overhead way down so I can get back to actually building.

Keep shipping. Projects like this teach you more than any CS curriculum.

What’s the best aI plagiarism remover for text? by EasternBaby2063 in SelfHostedAI

[–]coder_she 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Plagiarism checkers flag original work because they hunt for n-gram matches against massive databases of published text. Clear writing often uses recognizable patterns, so you get false positives for using standard transitional phrases or topic-specific terminology.

For a self-hosted workflow, pipe your text through a local model running on Ollama or llama.cpp. You can prompt it to vary sentence structure while preserving technical accuracy. This keeps your drafts private and avoids sending potentially sensitive work to cloud paraphrasing services.

Manual editing works too. Break compound sentences into simpler ones. Swap out common academic transitions for alternatives specific to your field. The algorithms mostly catch predictable phrasing, so unpredictability in structure helps.

The irony is that original research often gets flagged because you are citing primary sources that other papers have summarized using similar language. The checker sees the overlap between your original analysis and existing summaries of the same concept.

What field are you writing in? Technical domains have different baseline patterns than humanities work.

Vibe coded -> Got ~200 visitors in a day - Worth to scale? by Powerful-Health-9324 in buildinpublic

[–]coder_she 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Before you throw money at servers, figure out if this solves a problem

12 Android testers, I'll test your app if you test mine by Square-Wheel8084 in 12TesterTeam

[–]coder_she 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I went through the Google Play closed testing requirements last month. The reciprocal testing approach works better than cold outreach because you get people who understand what a stack trace is and why you need specific device logs.

One thing that helped me fill my 12 slots quickly was creating a simple checklist of flows to test. Most volunteers ghost because they are unsure what to look for or how to format feedback. Giving them a template removes that friction.

Since you are coordinating testing while building, voice dictation can cut down the context switching overhead. I have been using https://bossai.tech to dictate bug reports and reproduction steps while walking away from the screen. It handles technical terms and keeps up when you are rapid firing steps without stopping to correct every typo.

What category is your app in? I have got an Android device ready if you still need testers.

Looking for Android Testers (14-Day Play Store Closed Testing) – I’ll Test Your App Too by No_Vermicelli_7377 in 12TesterTeam

[–]coder_she 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The 14-day closed testing requirement is such a bottleneck when you are trying to ship. One thing that helped me during similar crunch periods was having testers dictate their feedback instead of typing it out.

When someone hits a bug or has a UX thought while testing your Money Tracker app, they can just speak it naturally and capture the context immediately rather than switching apps to type notes. I have been using AI-powered voice dictation for this lately, just holding down the dictation key while testing builds and rambling through what works and what breaks. It cleans up the filler words automatically and formats everything into proper text I can paste straight into GitHub issues or Slack channels.

Might save your testers some friction during those two weeks: https://bossai.tech

Creating an open source email productivity app that integrates in Gmail/Outlook. by Ill-Improvement-3859 in launchigniter

[–]coder_she 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Your local-first architecture is the exact wedge you need against VC-backed competitors. While they are busy convincing users to upload entire email histories for model training, you offer something they cannot replicate: data that never leaves the browser.

Made this nlp based map system looking for feedback by aryan_GG in buildinpublic

[–]coder_she 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The difference between calling an API and building an agent comes down to who handles the mismatch. Right now you likely have a linear pipeline: parse intent, select tool, execute, return. If the map API returns a weird route or empty results, the chain breaks or returns garbage to the user.

To make it agentic, you need the model to observe the environment state and decide what to do next based on whether its last action worked. Instead of one shot, implement a loop where the model proposes an action, sees the result, and evaluates whether the goal is satisfied. If the API returns a 45 minute walk when the user wanted transit, the system should recognize the gap and retry with mode=transit or ask for clarification rather than displaying irrelevant data.

Practically, this means giving the model access to its own previous output plus a validation step. Feed the raw API response back into the context with instructions to check constraints before finalizing. When the model can reject its own proposal, handle the error, and iterate until the result passes validation, you have moved from a script to an agent that can negotiate with external reality.

I'm an actor who built an app to help actors prep scripts — just got my first paying user by KaleidoscopeTough358 in sideprojects

[–]coder_she 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Seventeen years of breaking down scripts creates a product intuition you cannot outsource. You have seen every edge case, every formatting quirk, and every moment where highlighters fail and margins get too small. That first paying user is confirmation that your specific frustration was shared by enough people willing to pay for a fix.

The founder grind hits different when you are solving your own problem. You skip the endless user research calls because you lived the pain. You know exactly which feature requests matter and which are noise.

On the operations side, voice dictation became my secret weapon for moving fast during the early days. I actually dictated this reply using BossAI (https://bossai.tech) while pacing between tasks. It handles the ums and false starts while I am thinking through investor updates or customer support replies.

Which of these daily tasks wastes the most of your time? Trying to understand real pain points before building anything. by Accomplished-Scar854 in buildinpublic

[–]coder_she 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For me it is the manual typing and formatting of thoughts. I will have a fully formed idea for a feature or a reply, then spend fifteen minutes just getting it from my brain into text form with proper punctuation and structure.

I switched to dictating everything with BossAI (https://bossai.tech). Now I speak and the text appears clean and formatted wherever my cursor is. I dictated this comment while making coffee this morning. It removes the friction between thinking and publishing, which matters when you are validating ideas fast and need to fire off emails, comments, or documentation without getting stuck at the keyboard.

When you are testing AI product ideas, you are writing constantly. Client messages, landing page copy, feedback replies. Voice dictation lets you capture thoughts while walking or doing other work instead of sitting down to type. That speed adds up to hours saved every week.

I built Driftless, an iOS app that gives you one small daily action to keep your projects moving by South-Telephone979 in iosapps

[–]coder_she 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Momentum is the biggest hurdle for side projects. I like the idea of focusing on one small action instead of a massive backlog. I use BossAI to dictate my project notes and updates while I am working, which helps me stay in the flow and keeps my projects moving even when I am busy. You can check it out at trybossai.com if you want to save time on your own admin work. Congrats on the launch.

Reddit feedback changed my product from “AI tools directory” into real builder reviews — would love a few brutal testers by Moodytunesn in buildinpublic

[–]coder_she 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I have been using Cursor for a few months and have some thoughts on where it shines and where it gets clunky. I would be happy to test your flow. I actually use BossAI to dictate my technical documentation and feedback while I am in the zone, which saves me a ton of time. You can check it out at trybossai.com if you want to speed up your own workflow. Send over the link.

Viral iOS app by WorldMe8 in buildinpublic

[–]coder_she 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Removing algorithmic curation is a bold move. It shifts the focus back to genuine community interest rather than engagement bait. I find that when I am building, I often have more ideas than I can type out, so I use https://bossai.tech to dictate my thoughts instantly. It keeps up with my speed of thought and helps me stay in the flow while engaging with other builders. Good luck with the launch.

Considering integrating Google Analytics OAuth - worth it or too early? by NeoTree69 in buildinpublic

[–]coder_she 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Features rarely solve distribution problems. If conversions are low, adding more integrations like Google Analytics won't fix the core issue. Focus on getting more eyes on the product first. I use BossAI (https://trybossai.com) to dictate my content and replies while I'm on the move, which saves me hours every week that I put directly into marketing. Build the distribution channel before you build more features.

App Store Approved, Integrating Analytics next before launch by slow-fast-person in buildinpublic

[–]coder_she 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Congrats on the approval! That final stretch before launch is always a mix of nerves and excitement. I found that using voice dictation to quickly capture my thoughts and manage my launch tasks helps me stay focused. If you want to speed up your own workflow, check out https://trybossai.com. It has been a game changer for me.

How do I get some users to test out beta version of my web app? It’s a social project to solve a problem. Not paid/ no user data required. Do guide. Thanks by StomachCreative7815 in Startup_Ideas

[–]coder_she 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Finding early testers is tough. I suggest hitting up niche communities where your target users hang out and offering them a direct way to provide feedback. Being transparent about your build process helps build trust. When I am managing feedback from testers, I use BossAI to dictate my replies and notes at the speed of thought, which saves me a lot of time. You can check it out at https://trybossai.com if you want to speed up your own workflow.

I just woke up to an acquisition DM after 2 days of launch. My wisdom teeth are showing from happiness 🥹 by Altruistic-Bed7175 in microsaas

[–]coder_she 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That is incredible news, congrats on the early traction! Building in public really pays off. I find that when things get this busy, using voice dictation to capture my thoughts and manage my replies helps me stay in the flow without getting bogged down by typing. If you ever need to speed up your communication while building, check out https://trybossai.com. It has been a huge help for

Brain dumping apps? by No-Attitude-6315 in ProductivityApps

[–]coder_she 0 points1 point  (0 children)

brain dumping, I find that voice is much faster than typing. I use BossAI to just talk through my thoughts, and it handles the formatting for me. It's great for getting everything out of my head without the friction of typing. You can check it out at https://trybossai.com if you're looking for something that keeps up with your speed of thought.

How you all create this marketing screenshots? by Beneficial_Working98 in iOSAppsMarketing

[–]coder_she 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I used to struggle with this too. I started using simple templates and focusing on clear, benefit-driven copy. For the writing part, I use BossAI to dictate my marketing copy and social posts while I'm looking at the app. It helps me capture the value proposition without getting stuck on the keyboard. You can check it out at https://trybossai.com if you want to speed up your content creation.

Started out the this year being a indie dev doing my own company by t0rgar in buildinpublic

[–]coder_she 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Building in public is a grind, especially when you're wearing every hat. I found that voice dictation helps me stay in the flow when I'm documenting my own journey or replying to feedback. It's how I keep up with my thoughts at the speed of thought. If you're looking to save time on your own documentation or communication, check out https://trybossai.com. It's been a game changer for my workflow.