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The key word in AI is "artificial"


To me, the question is, can you build a better software team than your current product provider has? If you are planning to hire developers as if they are just construction workers, you're in for a bad surprise. Plus, attracting talent to such an industry would be very hard unless you are willing to pay high amounts, often with equity.

If you're going to hire one guy to start, check their portfolio to see that have build apps from scratch, and evaluate the quality. Many can't ship.


In my experience most folks stay at a company because of the relationships they form, not necessarily because of the work.

If you have a team of great people with an awesome attitude and human leadership, you could be doing almost anything (tech wise) and be happy.

The best technologists tend to follow each other around, if you have an exceptional leader, folks will follow them to the company, regardless of the business domain.


Hey folks - this is a new product I had a lot of fun hacking together.

The color schemes are generated by GPT4, which does a surprisingly good job at putting together good looking combinations.

The schemes are then sent out to our X account, which has about 150k people interact with the schemes.

These schemes are then ranked by engagement. A lot of people ask if feeding in the top schemes into GPT4 improves the output, but surprisingly, it does not. At some point, I will probably look to build in some kind ML scheme generator to optimize for hits.

The best one raked in 2m views: https://twitter.com/colorschemer/status/1697855177016160431


https://www.hackernewsdaily.com is built on Meteor - haven't touched it for years and its working great

really easy to update apps too


I usually charge per day or per week. If it's a few hours, I just tell them it's not worth my time.

The locality of the customer matters a lot. Usually, I will factor what it would cost for them to hire a full-time engineer (not just salary, but also overhead). A $120k salary will cost the company $200k, or $90 per hour. Then I'll add a % on top since I'm not getting days off, paid vacation, long-term security, etc.

That kind of reasoning helps with stingy customers. Otherwise, I just give a flat rate to solve their problem.

For customers that need me long term, I also ask for a monthly retainer to keep availability for them, for meetings, emergency bug fixes, etc. Otherwise, you're giving them the perks of an employee without them properly compensating you.


Minimum viable product :P


thanks for adding Paletter :)


What kind of features would you want for ten dollars?


I think 10 dollars is a lot to ask for a color picker when there are lots of established and free online options (Adobe Kolor, Coolers, etc.). If you could match the featureset of those programs with some sort of cloud-saving functionality/library for my palette, I'd probably go for it. Especially if it has a Linux-native frontend like GTK, I'd end up using it pretty frequently.

Your call though, I'm just a guy who uses software.


Thanks. Paletter's feature set goes quite beyond what the mainstream tools offer, but maybe that needs to be more clear.

Cloud palettes are probably coming. As for Linux, would be a tough call since most designers are on Mac and Windows.


Completely arbitrary


It supports RGB, LRGB, HSL, HCL and LAB (for now :)


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