> I am just mind blown if a non tech person like me can do this much then what's the ceiling for people who are Technical
Slight irrelevant because when it comes to business, the most important part is finding customers and selling to them. Tech people focus too much on product development and neglect sales.
Its not above being "Technical" but what kind of business probs you have experience with/deal with day to day. That decides what ceilings are.
If you spend your whole day working on cockpit software or a telco stack or power plant scada system market of who you sell your stuff too/what problems you are exposed to is niche.
Thanks a lot for the compliments. You mentioned that you liked TheLaTeXLab branding - specifically what do you like? I mean is it logo or our positioning?
Pieter Levels famously runs Nomad List as vanilla PHP application on a single Linux server, while people keeps insisting you need a fault-tolerant, multi-region cloud setup and the modern stack-du-jour to provide such an application.
While building I also create documentation in parallel. and md file in parallel also. like
Planning md - will have initial plan, goal, research, overview, tech stack.
Architecture md - will have all the architecture decision with reasons why we chose that.
each phase will have a separate documentation
all qa 1,2,3 will have md files noted everything.
deployement md, etc
I initally built these because - I can just change claude code to codex or new session anytime and giving access to the folder and it reads everything and can get updated on the current status.
How have you made money?
> I am just mind blown if a non tech person like me can do this much then what's the ceiling for people who are Technical
Slight irrelevant because when it comes to business, the most important part is finding customers and selling to them. Tech people focus too much on product development and neglect sales.
I agree. but there is another aspect of this.
I am thinking in terms of productivity increase of a tech person compared to before AI.
Its not above being "Technical" but what kind of business probs you have experience with/deal with day to day. That decides what ceilings are. If you spend your whole day working on cockpit software or a telco stack or power plant scada system market of who you sell your stuff too/what problems you are exposed to is niche.
domain expertise is always necessary
Really really impressive work. I love the branding on thelatexlab
Thanks a lot for the compliments. You mentioned that you liked TheLaTeXLab branding - specifically what do you like? I mean is it logo or our positioning?
>then what's the ceiling for people who are Technical.
The fact that everybody else will be doing the same, and thus making any advantage of using AI moot.
yessss
How do you handle code versioning, Deployment and Infrastructure as a non technical person ?
Engineers are prone to overcomplicating matters.
Pieter Levels famously runs Nomad List as vanilla PHP application on a single Linux server, while people keeps insisting you need a fault-tolerant, multi-region cloud setup and the modern stack-du-jour to provide such an application.
While building I also create documentation in parallel. and md file in parallel also. like
Planning md - will have initial plan, goal, research, overview, tech stack.
Architecture md - will have all the architecture decision with reasons why we chose that.
each phase will have a separate documentation
all qa 1,2,3 will have md files noted everything.
deployement md, etc
I initally built these because - I can just change claude code to codex or new session anytime and giving access to the folder and it reads everything and can get updated on the current status.
Forgot to add - built a mobile app also - that never went public. Because I have no bandwidth after 2 side hustle and full time job.
Fyi - I used to get scared while seeing terminal interface 3 months back.
the next step should be unifying ai + human. but how? i don't know.
In what sense?