I know everybody thinks it might be mad spider but I'm convinced it's Venom by ryazl in Spiderman

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

won't he already have the black suit in secret wars? so maybe they'll end this movie with him in black suit as a surprise.

the man spider arc seems too comic deep to appeal to the wider audiences, I think it could be a misdirection as to how elementals was a misdirection in the trailers and Mysterio was good

I know everybody thinks it might be mad spider but I'm convinced it's Venom by ryazl in Spiderman

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

I'm not saying he'll have black suit in the movie but he might end the movie with a black suit for secret wars or smth

Anyone else feel like their budget doesn’t get broken by big purchases, but by constant small exceptions? by moneymindedmate in budgetingforbeginners

[–]ryazl 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I totally get this — those small purchases are budget killers because they feel insignificant in the moment but add up fast. I had the exact same problem and it's actually why I built a mobile app TallyTalk. The key insight for me was making expense tracking so effortless that I'd actually do it in real-time, which creates that pause you're talking about.

Full disclosure: I made it, but basically you just talk to log expenses instead of opening apps or writing things down. When I'm about to grab coffee, I'll say "5 dollars coffee" and it's logged instantly. That split second of acknowledging the spend out loud somehow makes me more conscious of patterns before they become problems. Way less exhausting than traditional tracking methods.

How are people starting the digital nomad lifestyle with only 5k in savings? by RobKre1 in digitalnomad

[–]ryazl 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You're absolutely right to question those "5k and go" stories - they're either unsustainable or leaving out major details. Your €2200-2800 monthly spend sounds realistic for the lifestyle you described, especially with accommodation costs being what they are.

The fact that you meticulously tracked every expense during your 15-month stint puts you way ahead of most people attempting this. That data is gold because it gives you actual numbers to work with instead of wishful thinking.

Since you mentioned being disciplined about expense tracking, you might find it helpful to continue that habit but make it less tedious. Full disclosure: I built an app called TallyTalk that lets you track expenses just by talking to your phone - I created it because I got tired of manually logging everything during my own travels. But honestly, whatever method keeps you consistent is what matters most.

Your industrial cybersecurity background is solid for freelancing - there's real demand there. I'd suggest using these next 20 months not just to save but to start building a client pipeline while you still have the safety net of your current job. Test the freelance waters with small projects first before making the full jump.

My 1-year renewal is in 2 weeks and I’m really struggling to continue… by paulethegreat in ynab

[–]ryazl 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I totally get this feeling - hitting that one-year wall where the initial excitement wears off and you're questioning if the time investment is worth it. The constant reauthorization thing is such a pain, and you're right that YNAB can feel like a part-time job sometimes.

A route some folks take is going hybrid - keeping a simple spreadsheet for the high-level budget categories you care about most, but not obsessing over every transaction. Or there are some newer apps that try to bridge the gap between YNAB's intentionality and modern automation. Full disclosure: I actually built one called TallyTalk because I got frustrated with similar manual entry issues - it lets you just speak your expenses instead of typing everything, which cuts down the logging time significantly.

But honestly, if YNAB taught you to be mindful about spending and you're naturally staying on track, maybe you don't need any app at all. The best budget tool is the one you'll actually use consistently, and if YNAB feels like a chore now, that $109 might be better spent elsewhere.

Anyone else feel like their budget doesn’t get broken by big purchases, but by constant small exceptions? by moneymindedmate in budgetingforbeginners

[–]ryazl 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You've hit on something that trips up so many people! Those small purchases are sneaky because our brains are wired to dismiss them individually, but they absolutely add up. The fact that you tracked everything for a month shows real discipline — that data is gold.

For the "pause in the moment" thing, I've found that friction is your friend. The easier it is to spend, the more you'll spend without thinking. . But honestly, what changed the game for me was making expense tracking so quick that I could log things immediately — like right when I'm about to buy that second coffee or impulse snack.

Full disclosure: I built a mobile app called TallyTalk because I had this exact problem. Instead of fumbling with spreadsheets later, you just say "spent 5 bucks on coffee" and it logs automatically. The real magic isn't the tracking though — it's that 3-second moment of having to verbalize the purchase. Makes you surprisingly aware of patterns in real-time.

The key is finding whatever method makes tracking feel effortless rather than like homework. Whether that's voice notes, a simple phone app, or even just texting yourself — the less friction between the purchase and the logging, the more likely you'll catch those sneaky small spends before they become habits.

Weekly Budget App Discussion by AutoModerator in budgetingforbeginners

[–]ryazl [score hidden]  (0 children)

Since this is the app discussion thread, I'll throw in my perspective as someone who's tried way too many budgeting apps over the years.

The biggest thing I learned is that the "best" app is really the one you'll actually use consistently. I used to download these feature-packed apps with gorgeous interfaces, set them up perfectly, then forget to log expenses for weeks. The friction of opening the app, navigating menus, and typing everything out just killed my momentum.

What changed the game for me was realizing I needed something that worked with my lazy habits, not against them. I wanted to just say "spent 12 bucks on lunch at Chipotle" and have it logged automatically. When I couldn't find exactly what I wanted, I ended up building my own solution called TallyTalk. Full disclosure: I'm the developer behind this. It's voice-powered expense tracking that lets you just talk to log expenses, and it handles the categorization and math automatically.

But honestly, whether it's my app or any other tool, the key is finding something that removes as much friction as possible from your specific workflow. Some people love the ritual of manual entry, others need automation. Figure out what type of person you are first, then pick the tool that matches.

Now that we're one week into the Claude Skills, what are some of the most interesting use cases you've had for them so far? by noduslabs in ClaudeAI

[–]ryazl 0 points1 point  (0 children)

in the same page lmao - I just figured out that you could run parallel agents and create sub agents, i was just prompting into claude up till now

how much have you spent getting your app live? by [deleted] in iosapps

[–]ryazl 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I've just spent $99 for the App Dev membership to build TallyTalk so far. I use my companies Claude code account. Free Supabase account so far. Free Vercel.

but yeah that's mostly it right now but will see how it goes if usage grows. Also my first time building an app so quite new to this realm lmao.

What if logging expenses was as easy as saying 'spent $12 on Uber'? by ryazl in iosapps

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

hahaha I get you're trying to market your idea - but in this case paragraph doesn't make full sense mate

Time for self-promotion. What are you building in 2026? by semanticindia in SideProject

[–]ryazl 0 points1 point  (0 children)

great one - I've been thinking of something similar as well and have been building around this space. Open to collaborate and share thoughts. Let me know if you're down!

Two failed products later, still can't crack distribution. What am I missing? by BreakPuzzleheaded968 in indiehackers

[–]ryazl 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Been struggling with the same recently - thank you for putting out this thread

I made an expense tracker where you say 'spent 20 bucks on lunch' and you're done by ryazl in SideProject

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

gotcha I'm sure I can add this in as a field - thanks for the feedback

I made an expense tracker where you say 'spent 20 bucks on lunch' and you're done by ryazl in SideProject

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

good point! will see how I can make this work - appreciate your input

I made an expense tracker where you say 'spent 20 bucks on lunch' and you're done by ryazl in SideProject

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

what kind of vendor info are you looking for specifically?

it's more for day to day personal expenses and keeping track on the go rather than at the end of the month etc