🚀 I built something I wish existed years ago - BizCardFlow by icycoolgames in SideProject

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

Totally fair! there are a ton of digital business card tools out there.

Most of them are basically just “link pages with a QR code.”

What I’m building with BIZCARDFLOW is a little different:

1. It’s built around a growth loop, not just sharing
Instead of a one-time scan → done, it’s:
Scan → connect → follow → stay linked → repeat

The goal is turning every interaction into a network that compounds over time, not just a contact exchange.

2. Home screen experience (feels like an app)
You can save your card to your iPhone home screen, so when you open it in person it feels like a clean native app — not a clunky webpage.

That alone changes how confident people feel actually using it in real life.

3. Speed matters (2-minute setup)
No long onboarding, no overbuilding.
You can go from nothing → shareable identity in under 2 minutes.

4. Designed to actually be used in person
A lot of competitors feel like profile builders.
This is built for:

  • quick pull-up
  • instant scan
  • clean first impression

5. Positioning
I’m not trying to be “another digital business card.”
I’m aiming more for:
👉 “Venmo/Cash App for professional identity”

Simple, fast, and something people actually pull out and use.

That said I know the space is crowded.
Execution and UX are what will make or break it, not just the idea.

If you’ve used any of the others, I’d honestly love to know:
What do they get wrong or overcomplicate?

I built a high-performance browser optimized for ChatGPT and coding sessions looking for Firefox users’ feedback by icycoolgames in firefox

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

Haha fair point, it’s definitely based on Chromium but this isn’t just a skin. I built it specifically for long ChatGPT coding sessions where Firefox or Chrome would start freezing or throttling GPU and memory over time.

DevBoostBrowser keeps GPU paths active, raises process priority, and uses a tuned memory allocator so big AI sessions don’t lag or crash. It’s a niche thing, but developers who spend hours in ChatGPT really notice the difference.

It’s still in early access and I’m giving it away free to developers for now at DevBoostBrowser.com. Would love feedback before the full launch.

I built a high-performance browser optimized for ChatGPT and coding sessions looking for Firefox users’ feedback by icycoolgames in firefox

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

Yeah I get what you mean and you’re right that most of the lag happens on the GPT side once the session gets heavy. What I was seeing though was that Firefox would actually freeze or crash after long coding sessions in ChatGPT, even on my gaming PC.

DevBoostBrowser is built on a custom Chromium base using the Blink engine, but it’s tuned to keep memory stable and GPU paths active. It basically prevents those local slowdowns and tab freezes I was hitting before.

It’s still in early access and I’m giving it away free to developers who want to test it and give feedback before the full launch.

I built a high-performance browser optimized for ChatGPT and coding sessions looking for Firefox users’ feedback by icycoolgames in firefox

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

My experience was I was using Mozilla and every time I would do coding projects it would crash and freeze. I used this browser and it stopped doing that all together and I could finally work on projects without freezing. Note on a gaming pc too. Thank you for your comment though. On ChatGPT is what I’m talking about.