It's so true about picking up the stack for a side project. My wife asked for a simple grocery list app, and endedup in a rabbit hole trying different things. Funny things is I completed the project by using a stack I understand and making the web available in a couple of days.
the video mentioned "getting your product out there". can you guys make a video on how you guys would do it ? I have been wanting to promote my own project but no luck
I have two main side projects: a language learning app called Litany which is like Anki but uses math to choose the optimal cards and Stratum an RSS reader. Stratum I'm more proud of because it fixes the problems I have with RSS readers.
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I always listen to you while driving on pocket cast, it's nice to meet your expressions 😅
Would love to hear all about how you decided to design the receipt page. I'm going to guess React / JSX is involved. Non-web use of React is pretty interesting stuff.
I am building reddit clone for self hosting your community. I want to make it open source and maybe later release a pro version with some advance features. If I can sell it to some companies that would be cool.
seeing a lot of new AI SaaS out there, but majority of the founders don't even know the technical of ML or AI at all. how or where they get their AI model from to solve a problem?
They are using a general purpose model like GPT4 from openAI and Anthropic claude sonnet . Then they are using fine tuning , RAG or another ml technique to tailor their use case for a specific problem
Their products are just gpt wrappers. And no, they don't do any fine tuning. I ported one very popular gpt wrapper to mobile a few months ago, there's literally 0 effort in the product, it's just barely decent UI with hidden client-side prompts to get better results on a popular niche.
@@frenox4118 sure. most saas products are like this, very low effort but able to get a lot of people interested. Here in my country a very popular product is electronic billing for freelancers. The government already has a solution, both GUI and API, and yet there are over 20 providers that just wrap the service and put shiny stuff on top, offer additional goodies and such. Bill you an extra 20% just to use a free API lmao.
I'm the kind of person that gets easily interested in things... I need to practice focusing. Especially since I have a job and a baby. I could use some nice personal projects for my portfolio, but time is an issue for me... Feel free to shoot me some advice if you have any
I have 104 unfinished side projects. Just 3 side projects are currently in active development (this week lol)
How many projects from the 104 open source? I would love some inspiration
It's so true about picking up the stack for a side project.
My wife asked for a simple grocery list app, and endedup in a rabbit hole trying different things.
Funny things is I completed the project by using a stack I understand and making the web available in a couple of days.
i love it. scott is really outgoing and talkative
the video mentioned "getting your product out there".
can you guys make a video on how you guys would do it ? I have been wanting to promote my own project but no luck
Yes .. I'm seeking how this is done.
have you tried wanting harder?
I have two main side projects: a language learning app called Litany which is like Anki but uses math to choose the optimal cards and Stratum an RSS reader. Stratum I'm more proud of because it fixes the problems I have with RSS readers.
I always listen to you while driving on pocket cast, it's nice to meet your expressions 😅
Would love to hear all about how you decided to design the receipt page. I'm going to guess React / JSX is involved. Non-web use of React is pretty interesting stuff.
Scott, where did you get that glass you're drinking from at 2:15 ? It's so cool!
These amzn.to/47qtxdt from amazon. We loved them so much we have 8 of them, my primary drinking glasses - Scott
I am building reddit clone for self hosting your community. I want to make it open source and maybe later release a pro version with some advance features. If I can sell it to some companies that would be cool.
are there actually any project ideas in the video? i feel clickbaited
seeing a lot of new AI SaaS out there, but majority of the founders don't even know the technical of ML or AI at all. how or where they get their AI model from to solve a problem?
They are using a general purpose model like GPT4 from openAI and Anthropic claude sonnet . Then they are using fine tuning , RAG or another ml technique to tailor their use case for a specific problem
Their products are just gpt wrappers. And no, they don't do any fine tuning. I ported one very popular gpt wrapper to mobile a few months ago, there's literally 0 effort in the product, it's just barely decent UI with hidden client-side prompts to get better results on a popular niche.
@@MateoC-f4n thanks for the direction, i'll start look more into it.
@@frenox4118 sure. most saas products are like this, very low effort but able to get a lot of people interested. Here in my country a very popular product is electronic billing for freelancers. The government already has a solution, both GUI and API, and yet there are over 20 providers that just wrap the service and put shiny stuff on top, offer additional goodies and such. Bill you an extra 20% just to use a free API lmao.
Sounds like a lucky burnout monster 14:52
I'm the kind of person that gets easily interested in things... I need to practice focusing. Especially since I have a job and a baby.
I could use some nice personal projects for my portfolio, but time is an issue for me...
Feel free to shoot me some advice if you have any
youtube auto-deletes comments with links in them I think
I have a few mediocre side projects at ttools point input output
Martinez Linda Johnson Jennifer Young Edward
Whoa, first comment.
second comment