Hacker News new | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | anjit6's comments login

After trying quite a few, I started using multiple tools without worrying about sticking to one tool. This automatically free's up my mind space and allows me to focus on what notes to take rather than how I should format or which tool to use. The core point is that tools will evolve continuously, and it's hard not to switch.

I've learnt a method called CODE (Capture, Organise, Distill, Express from a book - Build Your Second Brain. It changed how I organised my information and helped me be more productive.

You can have a look and see if that methodology works for you.


Interesting project. I would love to hear your thoughts on these questions:

(a) If it's about modules, currently, people tend to use some open source projects or buy existing solutions (for example, SaaS dashboards). Is the core value the code copied into the repo?

(b) Does the code written by the bot match the repo style? Not just the file names and variable/functions names, but the overall code architecture, including database integration?

(c) I'm guessing most people would ask for similar modules (forgot password, subscription, billing, profile settings etc.). Will you generate the code every time through prompts or re-using (or mapping) some existing code previously developed for other customers?


Thanks for the repo.


Yes, I totally agree with you. I think to get into conversation with those like-minded founders is an art. It takes good amount of time to learn and get good takeaways.


I found something really cool stuff - summarising Startup School in simple and elegant form. Loved it. You may check it here: http://startupnotes.org


Consider applying for YC's Spring batch! Applications are open till Feb 11.

Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: