Indie hacker with no computer science experience building using no code tools

Joined July 2015
Photos and videos
The Old days:- Your code was your startup's moat NoCode Days:- Your SaaS can and will be copied. Instead of adding yet another cloneable feature... Focus on building content, authenticity and community. This can become your moat.
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Scared to build in public? This article by @gaby_goldberg convinced me that it's risky NOT to #buildinpublic bit.ly/3ixmuop

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Time for a change of direction: I haven't published some apps because I've been obsessed with the idea of learning how to structure databases "correctly". There's some great resources out there, but nothing that perfectly fits my apps. The time has come to learn by launching!
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Which NoCode app should you learn? It really depends. They all have different strengths and weaknesses. There's not One #nocode app to rule them all. Dabble and find the ones you like
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bit.ly/3fy1nAT is by far the best Airtable tutorial I've come across. It takes only 2 hours, and it's free! Thank you @aronkor!

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The best whitelabel version of @airtable is.... airtable Adalo or Webflow as the front end
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The new cloneable kits feature on @Adalohq looks like it could be a gamechanger. In almost every case, your "new app" idea is just a remix of building blocks that someone, somewhere has built before. Why build it from scratch, when you could just copy and paste?
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No Code Adventures retweeted
Replying to @bentossell
totally agree with @gregisenberg, unbundling Craigslist is the prime example for this!
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The case for sharing your ideas: "History. If your idea has been tried before (and almost all good ideas have), you should figure out what the previous attempts did right and wrong....
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A lot of this knowledge exists only in the brains of practitioners, which is one of many reasons why “stealth mode" is a bad idea. The benefits of learning about the maze generally far outweigh the risks of having your idea stolen." bit.ly/2BUI6fj

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Learning NoCode tools has changed my ideas about feasible business ideas. Before NoCode: I’d like to start my own a marketplace one day After NoCode: I’d like to start my own SaaS using automation tools
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FYI a marketplace is a service that connects two business / people. So that includes AirBnb, Uber, Tinder, TripAdvisor, Yelp....
I came into Nocode from a non-technical background. One of the things I still find mind blowing is that most apps are essentially just spreadsheets with a great user interface.
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Advice please: What is the best source for learning how databases on @bubble?
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The search was long...but finally found a great source for learning @bubble databases: bit.ly/3gtO05k

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Hey, is anyone experiencing bootstrap business overload? How are you dealing with it? I'm developing no code side projects in my free time, after my day job. Last week, I found that it was taking over my life...
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... even when I tried to sleep. Andrew Taggart writes about the concept of "Total Work". A mindset where work becomes the work becomes the meaning of life, and the point of life is to work more....
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What has helped for me? Remembering why I got into no code. It was to improve my quality of life, and that of my customers. If my side businesses are taking over, it's a signal to step back. I have also set up defined working hours: I never work after 8 pm, nor on Sundays.