Install Huzzler App
Install our app for a better experience and quick access to Huzzler.

Hello everyone,
While building my first SaaS I realized that I may have to spend time daily answering questions about API usage, billing, features etc. However I am also going to have a documentation, but it probably won't be read by actual users as much as I'd like...
How do you guys deal with this? Is this an actual problem you are facing as well?
I'm researching solutions and would love 2 minutes of your insights:
https://aicofounder.com/research/bpFw8fS
Thanks!

Hi everyone, I am launching a new web design and development service, specifically targeting founders and startups to help them validate their ideas. Will also be sharing our own "startup experiments" too.
To showcase our work and share our services, I have put together a portfolio site using Framer. Would really appreciate any feedback or if you could spot any bugs!


Hey Huzzler community!
After watching 1000+ of you launch here, I've started noticing a common pattern among SaaS launches:
Month 1-6: Build incredible product โ
Month 7: Launch on Huzzler and get great feedback
Month 8: "No customers.. Maybe I need more features?" ๐ค
Month 12: Still struggling with real customers... ๐ฐ
Here's the thing, almost everyone in this community can build. You're all incredibly talented.
We try posting on Product Hunt, tweeting, building in public... but our acutal customers are not browsing these sites. They're busy doing their jobs at companies.
That's why I'm building Customer Engine: a systematic approach to getting customers where you get exact daily tasks to get your first B2B customers.
Instead of: "What should I do today to get customers?"
You get: "Send 8 LinkedIn requests to marketing managers using template #3"
And you can actually see what's actually working for other founders (with real numbers).
Question for you guys: What's your biggest problem after launching your product? Is it getting the first real customers (who are not founders themselves)?
Would love your thoughts!
Waitlist: customerengine.co


For the past two weeks, I've been working on a personal project to create a web app called Spendflow(https://spendflow.me).
The goal was to help me control my personal bill payments. I've always
managed this using a Google Drive Sheet, where I'd mark what I needed to
pay by the end of the month on a horizontal timeline, and update the
status. The reason for the horizontal timeline is that it gives me a
clear sense of what's coming up and a sense of continuity, so I don't
pay things out of order.
I'm a developer who loves to build things, but I'm terrible at
design and marketing. My problem has always been that I never share the
ideas I have. So, I decided to use AI to boost my productivity and
launch things faster. Here are the steps I've taken so far:
- I used Bolt.new to create the first version of the app.
- After my free credits ran out, I subscribed to Bolt to improve the design.
- I transferred everything to my GitHub and subscribed to Copilot (with VSCode).
- I integrated the backend with Supabase
- I enabled Magic Link and Google Auth via Supabase.
- I set up auth emails with Resend
- I created a Stripe account for the first time to handle payments.
- I used a new SaaS called BoostToad to get some feedback.
- I added Google Analytics for traffic analysis.
- I deployed the app on Vercel
- Now for the most important part: finding customers!
I've replaced my spreadsheet with the app and am using it myself. I
know there are improvements to be made, but I've decided not to invest
more time until I work on the marketing and figure out if other people
have a similar need.
I've seen many finance apps out there, but I have no intention of
evolving this into something that deals with investments, savings goals,
or similar features. I also don't know if anyone needs something this
simple, even though it's been useful for me.
I've learned a great deal in just two weeks. I've read plenty of Reddit
posts about not wasting time building something nobody will use, and I
Get that. But considering I had never used 90% of the technologies on
this list, I feel much more prepared to find a new idea and create my
next product.
Thanks for taking the time to read about my project. Any feedback
is welcomeโfeel free to reach out with a DM. I'd love to hear what you
think


Hey everyone ๐
Iโve been working on a Chrome extension and would love to get some early feedback and thoughts from you.
The idea is simple: help people capture and organize inspiration from the web so it doesnโt just disappear after closing a tab. With Instaboard, you can:
- Save content in one click: whether it's the visible page, a selected area, or just right-click any image to save it.
- Stay organized: create collections, add titles/notes, and search quickly through everything.
- Build moodboards: select multiple saved items, arrange them visually, and export them as images.
- Keep it private: everything is stored locally in your browser (no accounts, no cloud).
The library view is a clean, visual grid that makes browsing and rediscovering your saved items easy. Power users can also use keyboard shortcuts and context menus for a faster workflow.
Iโd really appreciate your feedback:
- Do these features match how youโd want to save and revisit web inspiration?
- Is anything missing or could be simplified?
- Would you personally use something like this?
Thanks a lot! ๐




Hey folks,
Iโve been working on a side project called Tasklyst, a simple productivity app that runs on Windows and Linux (macOS will come later once I can justify the Apple developer fee).
I started it because I got tired of bloated to-do apps that need an account, live entirely in the cloud, or feel slow on desktop. I just wanted something fast, native-feeling, and not tied to a subscription.
Right now itโs:
- Cross-platform
- Works completely offline, no login required
- Minimal interface with light/dark themes
- Customizable task table (columns, sorting, etc.)
- Launches at boot and sits in the system tray
You can download it here (free, no sign-up): https://tasklyst.app
Iโm thinking about keeping a free forever version, but also offering a PRO upgrade to help fund development. Some ideas for PRO features:
- Optional sync + mobile apps
- Shared lists for teams
- Reminders and notifications
- Local AI task entry
- Voice to text
What Iโm trying to figure out:
- Is there actually space for a paid desktop-first productivity tool like this?
- Which features would make you consider paying?
- Does offline-first make it more appealing, or is the market just too cloud-oriented now?
- Am I already too late to the party because the space is saturated?
Would appreciate any honest feedback, even if itโs โdonโt waste your time.โ ๐






Hey, random share from me today.
Iโm the kind of person whoโs always finding cool stuff online โ articles, news, interesting blog posts and I love sharing them in FB groups, Reddit threads, or group chats.
But hereโs what started bugging me: every time I drop a link, Iโm basically sending people straight to someone elseโs site. Itโs great for sharing value, but I started thinkingโฆ is there a way I could also benefit a bit from all these clicks, without having to write my own blog or make my own content?
So hereโs what I tried:
I built this little tool that takes any link I want to share and wraps it in a new link. When people click it, they still see the original page (the article, news piece, or blog post), but thereโs a small popup or a banner with my own CTA โ likeย โCheck out my websiteโย orย โSubscribe to my newsletter.โ
Basically, it lets me keep sharing cool content as usual, but also gently invite people to visit my own page, drop their email, or do whatever I want them to do.
And itโs not just about email popups. For example, my friend sells solar panels, and he recently shared a news article about rising electricity prices โ but he used my tool to add a CTA leading people to his solar business website. So itโs super flexible.
Sometimes you donโt have the time (or the desire) to create your own articles or blog posts, but you still want to share valuable stuff and get some visibility in return. This kind of solves that.
Hereโs a random example I made with a Wikipedia page about Elon Musk:๐ย https://poplink.to/l/2s3fj3
I dropped that into some Facebook groups, and within an hour, people were not only reading the page but also checking out my own link. That felt like a small win because I didnโt have to create any original content, yet I still got extra eyeballs on my stuff.
Itโs definitely not perfect yet. Itโs totally free right now because itโs still in beta. Some sites block it, and Iโm working on ways around that (Iโve got some ideas but need time to implement them). But overall, itโs been surprisingly fun to play with.
Anyway, just wanted to share in case anyone else here has ever felt like theyโre sending free traffic to other peopleโs sites all the time โ maybe this is a way to get something back from it. Curious if anyone else has tried similar hacks or tools?






Iโm Mohd Anas, and Iโm working on BruhGrow Tools, a set of super useful web tools that stick to the basicsโno weird, confusing stuff here!
Weโre keeping BruhGrow simple, clean, and easy to use, so you can jump in and get what you need without any hassle. The tools are designed to give you quick, spot-on results based on what you put in.
Right now, weโve got 24+ awesome web tools ready to help you out.Most Used tools as Developer : Token Price Checker, Post Enhancer, Open Graph, PDF Into N Pages, SVG Icons, QR Code Generator, Password Generator, Flowchart Generator, Image Processor and Vectorizer, SVG Editor, Qolor Palettes, Sorter Extension
Youtube Based tools : Hashtag Generator, Description Generator, Thumbnail Generator, Transcript Getter, Keyword Title Generator, Title Rewriter
Learning Based Helping tools : Code Review, Daily Challenges, Project Ideas, Roadmap, Resources
๏ปฟThanks for taking the time to read and check out BruhGrow Tools. The goal of this post is to gather feedback from experts and experienced folks like you: )


Hey everyone!
My co-founder and I just opened up early access to Trackthemetric, a lightweight, privacy-friendly alternative to Google Analytics. It gives you useful insights without the complexity or creepy tracking.ย
We're building this as a tiny team of two and looking for early users to help us test it, share feedback, and shape what it becomes. The most important website analytics are ready but we're constantly moving and are currently adding AI-powered data analysis and payment provider integrations.
If you're running a site or a project and want to know how people are using your website, weโd love to hear what you think and if there is anything missing. No pressure to be nice, honest feedback helps us most!
You can start your free trial here: https://app.trackthemetric.com/sign-up
Happy to answer any questions or thoughts below too!
Thanks ๐
Jonathan


Hey Huzzler community!
After watching 1000+ of you launch here, I've started noticing a common pattern among SaaS launches:
Month 1-6: Build incredible product โ
Month 7: Launch on Huzzler and get great feedback
Month 8: "No customers.. Maybe I need more features?" ๐ค
Month 12: Still struggling with real customers... ๐ฐ
Here's the thing, almost everyone in this community can build. You're all incredibly talented.
We try posting on Product Hunt, tweeting, building in public... but our acutal customers are not browsing these sites. They're busy doing their jobs at companies.
That's why I'm building Customer Engine: a systematic approach to getting customers where you get exact daily tasks to get your first B2B customers.
Instead of: "What should I do today to get customers?"
You get: "Send 8 LinkedIn requests to marketing managers using template #3"
And you can actually see what's actually working for other founders (with real numbers).
Question for you guys: What's your biggest problem after launching your product? Is it getting the first real customers (who are not founders themselves)?
Would love your thoughts!
Waitlist: customerengine.co


So i recently made my first app Spenlys.com a ai powered personal finance app. But as you know ai is pretty expensive and getting initial users also kinda hard. So I made this approach - I lock some features behind a paywall (fake) when the users clicks the upgrade to premium, They get pro for free as a way of thanking for trying the app early and then I ask the user - "You got the premium for free would you have paid for it? " So I know if users are willing to pay for the features (validation) . I don't have enough data currently so I can't share it. I just want feedback if it's a good validation approach if you have already built the feature. What do you think?

Hey Huzzler community! ๐
I'm thrilled to finally introduce Pactando.com, financial analysis platform built specifically for startups, entrepreneurs, and lean teams (1-10 people).
Here's how Pactando can empower your financial decisions:
- Quick and easy ROI calculations
- Clear, actionable startup valuation
- Bankruptcy risk assessments (because it's better to know early!)
- Straightforward financial health checkups
- Ready-to-use business plan templates
- Simple yet insightful market research & competitor analyses
Who'll benefit most (ICP)?
- Early-stage founders (1-3 people) working on validating their ideas.
- Growing teams (5-8 people) aiming to attract investment.
- Scale-ups (up to 10 people) striving for optimal growth.
- Solo entrepreneurs who need real financial insights but donโt have a finance team.
Why did I build this?
As an entrepreneur myself, Iโve faced the frustration of tools either being overly complex and pricey or disappointingly basic. Pactando is my effort to bridge that gapโpractical, intuitive financial tools without the hassle or cost of enterprise solutions. I would like to highlight that is an MVP.
Why Pactando stands out:
- Instantly get actionable insights powered by friendly AI.
- Designed specifically for busy teams without a financial background.
- Combines multiple essential financial tools into one simple platform.
- Easy-to-understand results without the jargon.
Iโd genuinely love your candid thoughts:
- Does this resonate with your experiences and needs?
- How intuitive do you find the design and user experience?
- Are the pricing plans accessible and fair for smaller teams?
- Any features you'd love to see, or perhaps those we might reconsider?
- Would you actually use Pactando, and recommend it?
Dive in, give it a spin, and let me know what you think! Your honest feedback, especially as fellow founders, means a lot.
Thanks a ton for checking it out!
Hereโs the link: pactando.com






Hey Huzzlers..
I created a directory that serves as an online side hustles index where you can browse 370+ side hustle ideas, work-from-home opportunities, and easy ways to make money fast.
This is a totally free directory, updated monthly -ย No sign-ups required, no strings attached.ย โจ
It won Product of the day on MicroLaunchย the other day.
Now if you're feeling supportive, Iโm asking you to check it out and share your "Roast" feedback on ML.
๐ https://microlaunch.net/p/esidehustles
Happy to support back with your future launches.


Hey Huzzlers..
I built an AI food detector that guesses what you're eating
It won Product of the day on MicroLaunchย
Now if you're feeling supportive, Iโm asking you to try it and share your "Roast" feedback on ML.
๐ https://microlaunch.net/p/whatthefood
Let me have it. Brutally. No mercy.
Happy to support back with your future launches.


Hi everyone ๐ I'm soon starting the next development cycle for Huzzler and urgently need your opinions ๐
I'm a solo developer working on Huzzler, and I'm struggling to decide what to focus on. Your feedback would really help here.
Option 1: focus on the founder feed. Add daily interesting articles about tech, success stories, case studies. This will drastically reduce my time available to work on Huzzler and there are already some sites out there with daily news content (eg indie-hackers). However, these success stories could provide a lot of value.
Option 2: Focus on improving the community. Hide the founder feed from the homepage or add fewer articles and focus on making this community better. I'd like to add
- verifiable MRR with stripe (MRR badge on profile)
- KYC required + strict no AI policy. You'll have to verify with passport / drivers license using an external service. Everyday, people are getting more and more tired of the AI bots on platforms like X. On Huzzler anyone posting or commenting using an AI bot will be banned (3 warnings). It will be a very strict no-AI platform. It may seem overkill but will may sure you get to see real valuable posts instead of generic AI generated ones.
- MRR chart on profile + cooler profile pages ๐
- Project Milestones: new kind of structured post where post about the goal you achieved, how you did it and what you learned (this will be useful for learning from each other).
- Resource Hub: Hand picked resources and sites so you can use just one platform (Huzzler ๐) to find the best: launch platforms, indie hacker blogs, directories, marketplaces, newsletters, free coding courses.
What do you think would be best for Huzzler? I'm personally leaning towards option 2. Any other ideas are welcome (especially regarding the founder feed and placement, maybe we should show news articles the same way as posts? but with distinct styling?)
Thanks so much for everyone who is still a part of Huzzler. With your help, we'll make Huzzler great again ๐I really want to make this the best place to connect with other founders and learn from each other.

I'm exploring a concept for a week-long retreat where entrepreneurs can build an MVP using AI coding tools in just 7 days. Before investing more time, I'd love some honest feedback.
Here is the landing page I just created that explains the idea in more detail:ย http://launchedbyfriday.com/
You can find a quick google form to give feedback in there! (or right here:ย https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSdjTRA0W5iJtW_N07ZztMD0VL0tyTe8YXnjPAbGdnuax-v6-Q/viewform?usp=header)
I'm not selling anything - just trying to validate if this concept resonates before developing it further. All feedback welcome, especially critical perspectives.


Hey y'all, my co-founder and I just released an alpha version of our software. Eager to hear everyones opinion on the product, the site, and SDK.
Some specific questions we had:
- Is it clear what we do from the messaging? Would be helpful to hear in your own words what you think it is we do
- Are the SDK docs legible or are they missing something?
- Any other feedback is appreciated!
We want to make it really easy for this new wave of builders to get billing stood up quickly so they can focus on product (more on this outlook in anย paperย I wrote). Weย REALLYย welcome candid, constructive feedback and appreciate any thoughts in general. below is more structured info
___________
What the heck is Flowglad?
Flowglad is aย drop-in billing systemย that adapts to any pricing model, letting you set up and manage billing in seconds. Unlike traditional solutions, Flowglad isย built for developers,ย integrates seamlessly with your stack, and removes the need for maintaining a second copy of your billing data.
- 100% Open Sourceย โ Full transparency and flexibility, with a GitHub repo you can explore and contribute to:ย GitHub.
- Set Up in Secondsย โ AI-powered integration removes the need to sift through endless documentation.
- Full-Stack SDKย โ React hooks and backend functions designed for real-world usage.
- Zero Webhooksย โ No more brittle event triggers; Flowglad fetches real-time data on demand.
- Styled Embedded UIsย โ Drop-in, customizable billing components (coming soon!).
- Single Source of Truthย โ Access billing data scoped to your auth layer instantly.
- Built on Stripe's Railsย โ Seamlessly integrates with your existing Stripe account while fixing its billing shortcomings.
Why choose Flowglad?
Billing isnโt just about payments; itโs aboutย accuracy, reliability, and control. Stripe revolutionized payments, but billing remains aย structural nightmareโa silent tax on engineers who end up becoming part-time accountants, debugging sync issues, and reconciling revenue discrepancies.
Dev First
We believe billing should be:
- API-First & Modularย โ No more monolithic systems; plug-and-play components adapt to any pricing model.
- Real-Time & Transparentย โ Billing should be aย source of truth, not a black box.
- Built for Experimentationย โ Most startups arenโt iterating on pricing enough due to technical friction. Flowglad removes that friction


Hey Huzzler community!
After watching 1000+ of you launch here, I've started noticing a common pattern among SaaS launches:
Month 1-6: Build incredible product โ
Month 7: Launch on Huzzler and get great feedback
Month 8: "No customers.. Maybe I need more features?" ๐ค
Month 12: Still struggling with real customers... ๐ฐ
Here's the thing, almost everyone in this community can build. You're all incredibly talented.
We try posting on Product Hunt, tweeting, building in public... but our acutal customers are not browsing these sites. They're busy doing their jobs at companies.
That's why I'm building Customer Engine: a systematic approach to getting customers where you get exact daily tasks to get your first B2B customers.
Instead of: "What should I do today to get customers?"
You get: "Send 8 LinkedIn requests to marketing managers using template #3"
And you can actually see what's actually working for other founders (with real numbers).
Question for you guys: What's your biggest problem after launching your product? Is it getting the first real customers (who are not founders themselves)?
Would love your thoughts!
Waitlist: customerengine.co


Hi everyone,
โจI'm a co-founder of a design studio, and we're working on two free offers for early-stage founders to kickstart their brand:โจ
Founder Toolbox
โจA compact guide on essentials like logo tips, free fonts, color schemes, and pitch deck tips.โจ
Founder Feedback
โจPersonalized feedback via Loom video on a key asset (e.g., landing page or pitch deck).
Would this be helpful for you? โจWeโd love your thoughts โ is there a need for this? What would be most valuable? Anything missing?
Best
Denise


I'm finishing up a feature that captures posts and comments based on keywords. I really think it's perfect if you're looking to grow organically on Reddit, by the way.
- You can use strict or non-strict keywords. (Strict means the keyword is matched as a whole word. Non-strict matches even inside other words, for example, "ai" would match "pain" This is useful for catching different verb forms likeย track,ย tracking,ย tracked, etc.)
- Set keywords per subreddit, which makes sense because you might want to search differently in different communities.
- There are several filters available too, like: starred, trashed, ascending, descending, etc.
- Comment directly on posts or comments.
- Add users directly. (Why would you want that? Because the main goal here is lead generation, right? Youโll want to learn more about those users. This feature shows not just their most active and engaging subreddits, but also their pain points, wishes, seeking alternatives, bag of words, and more. You can even group them by tags).
Soon, Iโll also be adding charts that show things like common subreddits and pain points for each group you define.
I genuinely believe (not trying to sell you anything btw) that itโs super useful if you want personalized feeds for posts and comments, whether itโs to grow your product or just stay updated on topics you care about.
Itโs also a great tool for tracking both your own product and your competitors.



Hey everyone, as you may have seen we have recently added the Huzzler founder feed. It allows you to keep up to date with the most recent news (AI, tech, coding) and we will also post case studies and founder stories.
Newsletter is launching later this week.
I'm wondering what you guys think about the founder feed ๐
- Do you like it?
- Would you want a way to hide it on the homepage?
- What articles are you interested in?
Any feedback is appreciated!

I worked on improving the prompts for my system that turns YouTube videos into learning documents.
This is the result for a audio book available on YouTube.
Would love to hear your feedback - here's the Notion link:


Hi Huzzlers,
I'm testing some messaging for a landing page, and I'd love yto have your honest feedback.
This is the messaging above the line:
Struggling To Get Traction
For Your Startup?
โWeโre not interested.โ
โYouโre too early.โ
โNot for me.โ
**Crickets**
If that sounds familiar,
youโre not alone,
Iโve been there myself.
Every technical founder hits this wall.
Brilliant product, no traction.
And this is the call to action at the bottom (after a few more containers with more info):
If youโre hungry for results,
letโs get growing.
[START] <- This is a CTA button
--------------------------------------------------------------------
What do you think?

I built myself a system that turns YouTube videos into learning docs.
I did this because I don't have much time to watch YouTube videos, this way I can get a document that I can always reference and learn from it without watching the video again. It's very useful for me and I've been using it very often now.
I'm sharing a Notion link where you can see the documents I created so far.
I would love to hear your feedback on them - whether they are useful, need more content in them, or anything else you may want to share.
https://www.notion.so/Learning-system-docs-1f1016063c1080c6b1f7da435780a4fe?pvs=4


Posting on Reddit can be weird. Sometimes you write something thoughtful, and it gets ignored. Other times youโre not even sure what people want to hear.
I kept running into this myself. So, I started building something to make it easier to figure out what to say and how to say it, based on the subreddits you want to target.
The idea is to help you stop guessing and start with a clear guide instead. Itโs for people who want to contribute.
Itโs still early, but Iโd love to hear what you think.
Is this something youโd find useful? Anything that feels off or unnecessary?
Would love your feedback!!
Hereโs the link: EngagementSpark



Hey Huzzler community!
After watching 1000+ of you launch here, I've started noticing a common pattern among SaaS launches:
Month 1-6: Build incredible product โ
Month 7: Launch on Huzzler and get great feedback
Month 8: "No customers.. Maybe I need more features?" ๐ค
Month 12: Still struggling with real customers... ๐ฐ
Here's the thing, almost everyone in this community can build. You're all incredibly talented.
We try posting on Product Hunt, tweeting, building in public... but our acutal customers are not browsing these sites. They're busy doing their jobs at companies.
That's why I'm building Customer Engine: a systematic approach to getting customers where you get exact daily tasks to get your first B2B customers.
Instead of: "What should I do today to get customers?"
You get: "Send 8 LinkedIn requests to marketing managers using template #3"
And you can actually see what's actually working for other founders (with real numbers).
Question for you guys: What's your biggest problem after launching your product? Is it getting the first real customers (who are not founders themselves)?
Would love your thoughts!
Waitlist: customerengine.co


Hey fellow indie hackers! ๐
I m building a little tool that scans your code for security issues, API leaks, CSRF vulnerabilities, insecure cookies, SQL injection risks, and other "oh sh*t" moments BEFORE you ship.
It takes 3 minutes to run, and gives you actual code snippets to fix the problems - not just "you're screwed" warnings. Works with JS/TS, React, Node, Python, Laravel etc.
Now yeah, security scanners exist. But most of them assume youโve got a security team and time for audits.
This oneโs for solo devs and indie builders. The ones who ship fast and just want clear, no-BS answers.
Would you throw a few bucks my way for something like this if it saved you from that 3am panic when you realize your app has security holes after launching ๐?
Just trying to see if I'm the only one with these security nightmares!

Kuberns takes your project and gets it live, running, and managed - without you dealing with any of the cloud setup.
Every time we built something new, we wasted hours setting things up just to launch. It slowed us down and distracted us from what actually mattered.
So we built Kuberns to take care of all of that, so we could just focus on building.
We just launched and would love your feedback:
Would you use something like this for your next project?
What would stop you from trying it?
What would make it even better?
Thanks for checking it out! Kuberns


Built this to solve my own problem: finding people who are already asking for products like mine.
What Threddr does:
- Scans Reddit based on keywords + product info
- Finds fresh posts where users are asking for tools, alternatives, or solutions
- Scores each post by intent, sentiment, and engagement
- Lets you reply with AI-drafted responses
- Helps manage replies and follow-ups from one dashboard
I was tired of cold DMs and guessing where to find early users. This makes it easier to jump into real conversations where your product is already relevant.
Still improving things - especially around result quality and reply tone. If you're trying to get your first users, give it a try and let me know whatโs missing: https://threddr.com
Launched it on Launch Arena too - if you like it, your upvotes genuinely help:
https://huzzler.so/products/0DrQGfJqfc/threddr

I've built FacePic.app to transform selfies into professional headshots. I need your honest feedback on something crucial:
Do the people in my before/after examples still look authentically like themselves?
I've attached sample transformations and would appreciate your thoughts on:
- Can you tell it's the same person?
- Any features look unnaturally altered?
- Would you feel the AI preserves your identity if you used it?
Your feedback will help me refine the tool to ensure users feel properly represented in their professional photos.
Thank you!






I'm building a powerful tool to handle boring Reddit marketing, without users (founders) ever needing to actually use Reddit.
Hereโs what it includes:
- Sub Tracking: A scraper will periodically collect data on the number of users in specific subreddits you want to track.
- Scheduling: Schedule your posts for the best times, based on subreddit activity trends.
- Alerts: You can set up keyword alerts or even track competitors (just paste their profile link). This feature lets you monitor posts/comments and even respond directly from the platform.
- User Lists: Add users into groups (e.g., prospects). Once added, you'll get detailed insights and visual breakdowns of what they have in common, like which subreddits they follow, common pain points, or what solutions theyโre looking for.
As you can see, it's a pretty comprehensive tool. Once you've identified your key subreddits, you wonโt need to go back to Reddit to effectively engage your future leads.
Lastly, I know a lot of people are building SaaS and looking to validate their ideas. My plan is to offer a solid free version that helps with that early validation. Then, charge (fairly) once theyโre getting real leads and seeing results.
๏ปฟWhat do you think?

Can you give me feedback on my website: https://datascientistsdiary.com/

Hey guys I'm almost done building my new saas and would love some feedback on it

Hey Huzzler community!
After watching 1000+ of you launch here, I've started noticing a common pattern among SaaS launches:
Month 1-6: Build incredible product โ
Month 7: Launch on Huzzler and get great feedback
Month 8: "No customers.. Maybe I need more features?" ๐ค
Month 12: Still struggling with real customers... ๐ฐ
Here's the thing, almost everyone in this community can build. You're all incredibly talented.
We try posting on Product Hunt, tweeting, building in public... but our acutal customers are not browsing these sites. They're busy doing their jobs at companies.
That's why I'm building Customer Engine: a systematic approach to getting customers where you get exact daily tasks to get your first B2B customers.
Instead of: "What should I do today to get customers?"
You get: "Send 8 LinkedIn requests to marketing managers using template #3"
And you can actually see what's actually working for other founders (with real numbers).
Question for you guys: What's your biggest problem after launching your product? Is it getting the first real customers (who are not founders themselves)?
Would love your thoughts!
Waitlist: customerengine.co


Hey Huzzlers,
I'm building Threddr - a tool to make it easy to find Reddit posts where people are already asking for the kind of product you're building.
Right now, itโs way harder than it should be to connect with real users who actually want what you're making.
I'm solving that by helping you discover the right posts fast - no guessing, no wasting time.
The core idea is live, and I'm refining the final flow โ would love your thoughts:
- What would make a tool like this a daily habit for you?
- Anything you'd hate if it showed up in the results?
- Anything you think must be there?
Waitlist is open if youโre curious: https://threddr.com ๐
Open to all thoughts โ brutal or brilliant. ๐

