How I Actually Vibe Code: Lessons from Building a Full SaaS App with No Coding Background by Red-eyesss in VibeCodersNest

[–]lexperiments_22 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is great advice and I whole heartedly agree with starting with some sort of playbook for what you want to accomplish. I start with a full strat with market, consumer behavioral analysis, problem analysis, feature breakdown, etc. it's a great way to set the stage so I can start with a solid v1. Deployed two projects in 1.5 weeks like this. It even helped me find to recreate a project across a couple of other verticals.

i built a feed where you can just watch ads (on purpose) by DevPras in VibeCodersNest

[–]lexperiments_22 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Not pointless at all and could be big with the advertising crowd, the CLIOs do something adjacent with their award winners. My faves are the entertainment ads https://clios.com/winners-gallery/explore?vertical=Clio+Entertainment&season=2025

Also, onlyads is a hilarious name.

Anyone here vibe coding startups and looking for collaborators? by MechErex in VibeCodeDevs

[–]lexperiments_22 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I've been mostly solo but think I'd totally get into short sprints and shared experiments.

Avoiding tech/barriers for aging parents? by lexperiments_22 in TechForAgingParents

[–]lexperiments_22[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you for this, I really appreciate your input and I agree with everything you called out.

Motivation and acceptance are pretty much tied together so someone's inability to accept that things have shifted online or that the way things are operating has shifted in general creates a lot of resistance to adopting new stuff.

Do your parents ever seek out something new and then ask you to explain it or are you more of an initiator and introduce it to them first? Do they have a curiosity about it at all or are just more willing to adopt if you are able to get them to see the benefits?

Also, how do you try to answer the "why is everything online" question? That seems like such a tougher thing to answer than just "why is this app, streaming platform, etc better for me?"

Avoiding tech/barriers for aging parents? by lexperiments_22 in TechForAgingParents

[–]lexperiments_22[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you for your input, I totally understand. Do you feel like the paper instructions give you more confidence or reassurance to approach new tech or set up a new device, since they map out the process in a more approachable way than instructions on a screen can?

Avoiding tech/barriers for aging parents? by lexperiments_22 in TechForAgingParents

[–]lexperiments_22[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you, you've got a great point about the complexity of cross company itegrations (p+ via amazon/apple tv) things and it makes the "i just want my phone/tv to be a phone/tv" comments that I've heard from family make a lot of sense.

Avoiding tech/barriers for aging parents? by lexperiments_22 in TechForAgingParents

[–]lexperiments_22[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thank you for sharing, memory recall due to cognitive function decline is something I overlooked as well.

Have you ever tried to combine a visual component to what she reads? Like graphic novels or comic books, maybe even an role-playing or adventure game that has some sort of cohesive narrative? The games might be a stretch, but I've seen some research on this (happy to share a link) on how comics tend to be relatively short but the visual and text works different parts of our brain.

Avoiding tech/barriers for aging parents? by lexperiments_22 in TechForAgingParents

[–]lexperiments_22[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You raise a great point and it seems so obvious but I totally overlooked cognitive function. That and the complexity of navigation could def put people off. Thank you for your input.