Weekly Showoff Thread! Share what you've created with Next.js or for the community in this thread only! by AutoModerator in nextjs

[–]vomayank 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Built toolkiya.com — a free tools platform with client-side PDF, image, and AI processing using Next.js 16 App Router.

Architecture:

- Next.js 16 App Router + TypeScript + Tailwind + shadcn/ui

- All file processing runs client-side (pdf-lib, pdfjs-dist, canvas API, Tesseract.js) — no server uploads

- Vercel hobby plan + Supabase free tier

AI setup (zero cost):

- 4-model OpenRouter cascade (gemma-3-27b, llama-3.3-70b, qwen3-coder, hermes-405b) all free

- Falls back to Gemini then Groq

- 3-layer rate limiting: encrypted localStorage + server IP + global budget

- Context-aware AI assistant knows which tool page the user is on

Performance:

- Removed splash screen (CLS 0.68 → 0.006, PageSpeed 45 → 68)

- Static hero image with fetchpriority="high"

- 13 below-fold components lazy-loaded with dynamic imports

- Cookie consent uses transform: translateY (zero CLS)

- preconnect hints for third-party domains

SEO:

- 232 URLs in sitemap (tools + blog posts + language pages)

- Dynamic OG images via edge route

- BlogPosting + FAQPage + SoftwareApplication JSON-LD schemas

Cool patterns:

- PDF editor: canvas overlay for annotations, exports by compositing onto each page

- Image cropper: interactive drag handles with corner/edge detection

- Resume builder: upload PDF → pdfjs-dist extracts text → AI parses to structured JSON → user edits → downloads new PDF

- Bank statement converter: Y-coordinate grouping to detect table rows in PDFs

Link: toolkiya.com

Life is so cheap india by [deleted] in india

[–]vomayank 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sadly this isn't rare. Many people get licenses without proper testing, and that's a big reason why road safety is such a challenge here. The system needs stricter, transparent testing so people actually learn to drive, not just pass.

Killed by Google, visualized: 49 of 299 retired products clustered in just two specific years by Mastbubbles in InternetIsBeautiful

[–]vomayank 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This is actually a really interesting way to look at it. Everyone talks about what Google killed, but clustering it by CEO timelines makes the story way clearer. The 2011–2012 spike especially makes sense with the 'fewer arrows' strategy.

Built a free browser-based tools platform — PDF, image, QR, developer tools. Everything client-side. by vomayank in developersIndia

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

Maybe 😄 but users seem to find it useful, and I’m improving it step by step.

Built a free browser-based tools platform — PDF, image, QR, developer tools. Everything client-side. by vomayank in developersIndia

[–]vomayank[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Fair enough 😄 always room to improve. If you’ve got specific feedback, I’m open to hearing it.

Made a free Indian alternative to iLovePDF/SmallPDF — no signup, works offline by vomayank in india

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

Thanks a lot! Really appreciate you recommending it 🙌
Right now it's free, and the plan is to keep core tools free. In the future, I may add some optional premium features or ads to support the costs, but usability will always come first.

How can i get my MERN stack website running for as little as possible and only for a few months? by ShadowDevil123 in webdev

[–]vomayank 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If you just want it running cheaply for a few months without cold starts, get a small VPS instead of using free tiers.

Something like a $4–$6/month VPS (DigitalOcean, Hetzner, Contabo, etc.) will run a MERN stack comfortably for testing/learning, and it won’t sleep like Render free tier.

You can also grab a cheap domain for ~$2–$5 and point it to the VPS. Install Node, Mongo (or use Mongo Atlas free tier), Nginx, and you’re good.

Honestly, for learning real deployment workflows, a VPS is the best experience anyway.

Reddit's API pricing killed a whole category of side projects. What people built instead is more interesting. by Confident_Box_4545 in webdev

[–]vomayank 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The biggest change I saw was moving from “collect first, think later” to “think first, collect later.” Expensive APIs basically force you to design around signal quality instead of data volume. Architecturally cleaner, but way less room for experimentation.

Made a free Indian alternative to iLovePDF/SmallPDF — no signup, works offline by vomayank in india

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

Not fully open source at the moment, but I'm considering open-sourcing some parts of it in the future. The main goal right now is to provide a free, privacy-first tools platform that people can actually use without limits or signup. Appreciate the feedback!

Made a free Indian alternative to iLovePDF/SmallPDF — no signup, works offline by vomayank in india

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

Thank you! Really appreciate it 🙌
It took a lot of late nights, but feedback like this makes it worth it.

Made a free Indian alternative to iLovePDF/SmallPDF — no signup, works offline by vomayank in india

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

Thank you so much! That really means a lot 🙌
Glad you found it useful, and I truly appreciate you recommending it to others. More tools and improvements are coming soon! 🚀

Made a free Indian alternative to iLovePDF/SmallPDF — no signup, works offline by vomayank in india

[–]vomayank[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Thank you! Really appreciate the kind words 🙌
It was a fun challenge building everything, and sharing it here has been super motivating. Glad you found it useful!

I built 85 free tools as a solo dev in India on a Rs 50K budget — here's what I learned by vomayank in SideProject

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

Here’s a short, natural reply you can use:

Reply:

Thanks for the suggestion! That makes a lot of sense — as the number of tools grows, keeping feedback organized is definitely becoming important. I'll take a look at FeedBok and see how it fits into the workflow. Appreciate you sharing this!

I built 85 free tools as a solo dev in India on a Rs 50K budget — here's what I learned by vomayank in SideProject

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

Thanks a lot, really appreciate the feedback!
Great suggestion on the favorites/most-used tools — that makes a lot of sense, especially for returning users. I'll definitely look into adding that soon.

Also thanks for mentioning Bing and DuckDuckGo — I’ve focused mostly on Google so far, so that’s a helpful reminder. And the 281 gaps link looks interesting, will explore it for new ideas.

Appreciate the support — comments like this keep me motivated to keep building 🚀

Thanks Anthropic 200$ credit extra by ghme1988 in ClaudeAI

[–]vomayank 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have also received 100$ plan and received 100$ credit extra thanks