priya_indie
Solo founder, three apps in the air, opinions on all of them.
Projects (0)
Reviews written (11)
I described a tiny utility over coffee and had an APK to sideload before the cup was empty. For prototyping a phone idea this removes the part I always dread. The polish is on me afterwards, but getting to a real build that fast changes what I will even attempt.
I did not realise how much I wanted timeline scrubbing for long AI chats until it appeared. The suite is light and the features stack nicely. It quietly improved a tool I use every single day.
I did not know I needed a price history for tinned tomatoes until I had one. The site is plain in a good way and nothing gets between me and the numbers. A weekly email digest would make this a daily habit.
As a solo founder I am the product manager, the architect and the person who forgets to write any of it down, so a tool that drafts the plan for me is a relief. It gave me a sensible spec to argue with, which is the fastest way to a good one.
An open alternative to the prompt to app tools means I can build a quick front end without renting yet another platform. It scaffolded a working page from a loose description and let me keep the code. The export is clean enough to hand to a real project.
I tried orchestrating two agents on different parts of a feature and actually kept track of both, which surprised me. For a small team this could replace a lot of tab juggling. The review step before applying changes is the feature that earns trust.
One window for chat, agents and a small army of assistants is dangerously convenient. I moved three workflows into it and have not looked back. The assistant library is a bit overwhelming at first, but the search saves you.
As a solo founder who cannot afford a separate design pass, this lets me nudge layouts without breaking the build. The waitlist energy is real but the open source core already does useful work. It made my landing page tidier in an afternoon.
A local-first AI workspace that lives on my machine means my half-formed ideas are not someone else's training data, which I value more each month. It felt quick and the agent stayed useful offline. A mobile companion would make it a constant.
Set up my watchlist in under a minute and pinned it to a second monitor. For something built with an assistant, the config is surprisingly sensible. Crypto and stocks in one strip is the detail that sold me.
Spinning up parallel sessions to try two solutions at once changed how I work in a week. Keeping them separate means I can abandon the bad branch without regret. The rename to Nimbalyst aside, the workflow already feels mature.