Audrow Nash
@audrow
Does podd.app have a logo? SVG preferred.
Cool, I don't really know that much about audio but that was my two basic cents anyway :D
Sorry, no logo exists yet for the app. It's still under development and is just something we work on sporadically when there's time over.
Great, I'll add podd.app to our podcast platforms list. Thanks for adding it!
Thanks for the tip on the blankets and the dynamic microphone. Improving the audio quality is definitely the next move for the podcast. I'll check out dynamic mics and try to pad my space.
I'd love to hear your thoughts as we have more episodes about what we could do better.
Does podd.app have a logo? SVG preferred.
Cool, I don't really know that much about audio but that was my two basic cents anyway :D
Sorry, no logo exists yet for the app. It's still under development and is just something we work on sporadically when there's time over.
whether it's clear what the project is?
I think so. It's a nocode / little code way of building web applications.
Do the feature descriptions feel too long?
The feature descriptions don't feel too long to me. Although, the way things are organized feels a little strange to me. The pricing hero is at the top and then it goes back to listing features that aren't clearly connected to the 6 features you mention at the top. It'd be nice to expand on the features one-by-one, for example the color picker probably relates to the GUI builder feature.
What would you pay for something like this?
Yeah, if it worked well.
It seems like an awesome and gigantic idea. I'm not sure how far along you are (I tried what works so far and exported a project with plugins) / how large of a team you're going to build this with. In general, it seems like a total solution that is trying to do everything. Normally, when I try to do "everything" solutions, the scope is too large, and is probably best to be done by a large team somewhere and not me. If it's just you, maybe consider picking a smaller part of the problem that you can do well. For example, I'd be interested in something that mixes, matches, and manages the whole tech stack, even if I'm still writing code, which if I understand correctly, is just a part of what you want to do.
That being said, it looks awesome and I hope to use it.
I use Roam. I really like it. A few of my favorite things:
* The workflow of dumping notes in a daily page and then using backlinks to find them later is magical. I don't spend time organizing and I can find things quite efficiently.
* Page links have namespaces. You can do something like [[startup/ideas/SaaS/Fruit delivery]]
. This is very nice for searching and autocomplete.
* With the Roam Toolkit Chrome extension, I get to have Vim keybindings to navigate Roam.
Notion is pretty good, although, for most things it does I prefer other services. I was using in as a CRM for a while, now I'm using Monica, which I like much better.
Also, this may seem kind of outdated, but I use Evernote as a dump for content. In my experience, it has had the best searching of many different kinds of files including scanning pdfs and pictures of documents and it has a great web clipper.
I'm pretty new so take my opinion with more salt than usual.
I would optimize for the long-term. Maybe I'm reading too much into it, but it sounds like you're a little burned out of the stack you're using. I think it's important to work on things consistently, and you may make more progress using the stack that lets you work fastest, but you may get more burned out and then be less motivated to work on projects for a while afterwards. In the long-term, you may get less done.
If it were me, I'd try a minimal prototype in the new fancy language (and probably my best language for comparison). See how it feels and see if the advantages seem as large or as promising, and decide from there. From my perspective, this kills a few birds with one stone: you're less curious about the grass over there, you get to evaluate your new tech, and you may have a better idea about how to structure your implementation. That being said, it does cost time.
Hopefully this helps.
A robotics podcast, called the Sense Think Act Podcast: sensethinkact.com/, specifically the website, an introductory episode, and the first interview, and we pushed it out on social media.
The second episode just aired. I'd be happy for feedback, if you have any thoughts on what could be better.