AI is everywhere in SaaS; how do we define what it actually delivers for us?
Discussions and useful links for SaaS owners, online business owners, and more.
AI could be a great teammate for solo founders; how do we make it reliable?
A place to change your life with micro SaaS apps
Startups need speed; how can AI be quicker to adopt than it is today? (I will not promote)
Welcome to /r/startups, the place to discuss startup problems and solutions. Startups are companies that are designed to grow and scale rapidly. Be sure to read and follow all of our rules--we have specific places for common content and requests.
AI holds great promise; how can we trust it to accelerate decisions without slowing down?
Our community brings together individuals driven by a shared commitment to problem-solving, professional networking, and collaborative innovation, all with the goal of making a positive impact. We welcome a diverse range of pursuits, from side projects and small businesses to venture-backed startups and solo ventures. However, this is a space for genuine connection and exchange of ideas, not self-promotion. Please refrain from promoting personal blogs, consulting services, books, MLMs, opinions.
AI should help us learn; how can it be more of a teacher and less of a puzzle?
A subreddit for all questions related to programming in any language.
Solo builders need speed; how can AI become part of a reliable workflow?
IndieHackers is a subreddit focused on people who bootstrap their way to success by building products.
If AI is so advanced, how can we make it a true partner instead of a puzzle?
For experienced developers. This community should be specialized subreddit facilitating discussion amongst individuals who have gained some ground in the software engineering world. Any posts or comments that are made by inexperienced individuals (outside of the weekly Ask thread) should be reported. Anything not specifically related to development or career advice that is _specific_ to Experienced Developers belongs elsewhere. Try /r/work, /r/AskHR, /r/careerguidance, or /r/OfficePolitics.
Dev Productivity = 61% Chaos + Repetition? How We Got Here (and Why AI Isn’t Saving Us Yet)
Tips and tricks for being more productive!
SaaS is supposed to be efficient. So why are teams still so drained?
Discussions and useful links for SaaS owners, online business owners, and more.
When your product is small, every minute matters
A place to change your life with micro SaaS apps
Progress isn’t about moving fast. It’s about protecting time to build (I will not promote)
Welcome to /r/startups, the place to discuss startup problems and solutions. Startups are companies that are designed to grow and scale rapidly. Be sure to read and follow all of our rules--we have specific places for common content and requests.
The real risk to startups isn’t competition. It’s dev distraction
Our community brings together individuals driven by a shared commitment to problem-solving, professional networking, and collaborative innovation, all with the goal of making a positive impact. We welcome a diverse range of pursuits, from side projects and small businesses to venture-backed startups and solo ventures. However, this is a space for genuine connection and exchange of ideas, not self-promotion. Please refrain from promoting personal blogs, consulting services, books, MLMs, opinions.
What happened to having time for real engineering?
For experienced developers. This community should be specialized subreddit facilitating discussion amongst individuals who have gained some ground in the software engineering world. Any posts or comments that are made by inexperienced individuals (outside of the weekly Ask thread) should be reported. Anything not specifically related to development or career advice that is _specific_ to Experienced Developers belongs elsewhere. Try /r/work, /r/AskHR, /r/careerguidance, or /r/OfficePolitics.
The real friction isn’t in the code, it’s in the work around it.
fully give in to the vibes. forget that the code even exists.
Learning to build feels harder because of everything outside the code
A subreddit for all questions related to programming in any language.
Solo dev work still feels slow and it’s not the code’s fault.
IndieHackers is a subreddit focused on people who bootstrap their way to success by building products.
Why does side project work still feel like overhead even with AI?
r/SideProject is a subreddit for sharing and receiving constructive feedback on side projects.
Two decades in and dev still feels heavy because the friction hasn’t moved.
For experienced developers. This community should be specialized subreddit facilitating discussion amongst individuals who have gained some ground in the software engineering world. Any posts or comments that are made by inexperienced individuals (outside of the weekly Ask thread) should be reported. Anything not specifically related to development or career advice that is _specific_ to Experienced Developers belongs elsewhere. Try /r/work, /r/AskHR, /r/careerguidance, or /r/OfficePolitics.
Why does setting up the basics still take this long in 2025?
fully give in to the vibes. forget that the code even exists.
Why does setting up the basics still take this long in 2025?
A subreddit for all questions related to programming in any language.
After 24 years leading teams, the dev friction hasn’t gone away
For experienced developers. This community should be specialized subreddit facilitating discussion amongst individuals who have gained some ground in the software engineering world. Any posts or comments that are made by inexperienced individuals (outside of the weekly Ask thread) should be reported. Anything not specifically related to development or career advice that is _specific_ to Experienced Developers belongs elsewhere. Try /r/work, /r/AskHR, /r/careerguidance, or /r/OfficePolitics.
Solo shipping was supposed to get faster with AI, right?
IndieHackers is a subreddit focused on people who bootstrap their way to success by building products.
Do you ever spend more time prepping your stack than actually building?
r/SideProject is a subreddit for sharing and receiving constructive feedback on side projects.
Why is setting up a screen still harder than building the feature itself?
r/SideProject is a subreddit for sharing and receiving constructive feedback on side projects.
AI was supposed to reduce dev friction, but I’m still stuck in the same loop. Curious what others think?
IndieHackers is a subreddit focused on people who bootstrap their way to success by building products.