Ashton Blake

Forums

p/prodshortAmrani Yasser

4d ago

Is solving your "own problems" the best way to build a product?

For us, it started from something frustrating: creating content felt very annoying and time-consuming. We tried the classic way: scripting, memorizing, filming, editing. But none of it felt authentic. And honestly, it was eating time we needed to focus on other things.

At the same time, we kept reading the same advice everywhere:
"founders should build in public and create content consistently". Easy to say but harder to do in reality. So instead of forcing ourselves to create content from scratch, we tried something simple: recording our own calls and using those moments as content.

Nika

5d ago

What marketing strategies do you consider unethical, and which ones do you consider brilliant?

During today s standup meeting, an idea came up about improving our presence on Reddit (for LLM search visibility and similar reasons).

One of the suggestions was to look for high-karma accounts and possibly buy them to appear more credible when posting and mentioning the product within the posts/comments. It s a tactic, sure, but to me it already feels like it crosses an ethical line. I sometimes worry they can seriously damage a company s reputation.

The cost of technical debt: a longitudinal study of 100 startups.

We analyzed the codebases of 100 startups that hit a scalability wall (*)
The goal was not to find the most exotic bug. The goal was to find the most common, expensive, and preventable patterns of failure.

The results were almost identical across 85% of them. Here is what the data says.

The Timeline to Failure

Months 1 6: Everything worked. Fast releases. Happy customers. No time for architecture.

Why Everything’s a Subscription (and Why That Might Actually Be Good)

It s easy (and fair) to complain about subscription fatigue. But here s the take that might rub people the wrong way:

Subscriptions aren t the problem they might actually be the fix.

End of an era: Tim Cook to become Apple Executive Chairman; John Ternus to become Apple CEO

Apple announced that Tim Cook will become executive chairman of Apple s board of directors and John Ternus, senior vice president of Hardware Engineering, will become Apple s next chief executive officer effective on September 1, 2026. The transition, which was approved unanimously by the Board of Directors, follows a thoughtful, long-term succession planning process.

Cook will continue in his role as CEO through the summer as he works closely with Ternus on a smooth transition. As executive chairman, Cook will assist with certain aspects of the company, including engaging with policymakers around the world.

Just in time for Ternus to usher in a new era for Apple and a revamped Siri in the age of AI at WWDC, in its 50th year.