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vsupalov | 9 months ago
The challenge when exploring this topic: the incentive to stay under the radar. Those succeeding don't have much to gain from sharing details here. Worst case: it could invite competitors into their space.
Communities that thrive on growth (e.g., open-source) tend to share freely, but API businesses, especially ones which are easy to execute, often guard their edge.
A recent finding I had, while not necessarily an API: services which help you 24/7 stream a lenghty video file. YouTube live streams seem to work well for those lofi-types of channels, and there are services which are built to enable autopilot live streams.
jlundberg|9 months ago
At the end of the day, it is about what the customer is willing to pay for.
Back when The Pirate Bay was huge, music was essentially free. But Spotify came along and proved people are ready to pay for something better.
ImageMagick is an open source tool for resizing images etc. But some people successfully build API services or SaaS-services on top of it.
It works because people AND businesses pay for convenience.
What space do you have knowledge of? What pains do people have in that domain that can be solved with tech?
Always start with the problem. And start with an industry you know by heart or customer profile you truly care for.
For me that was software developers. I was that customer myself. I programmed a certain kind of solutions, realized there should be an API for this and built that API.
bad_haircut72|9 months ago
monero-xmr|9 months ago
I know right this very second exactly how I could do a unique twist on my existing business and conservatively make another $1 million a year in profit within 2 years. But I already work 60+ hours a week on this business and I’m making tons of money, and the risk of revealing my secrets to another person to build the new business is simply too high.