yoshyosh's comments

yoshyosh | 5 months ago | on: I forced myself to spend a week in Instagram instead of Xcode

highly recommend focusing on just tiktoks/reels rather than stories that expire every 24 hours. They will pick up more views beyond your audience, especially if you "warm up" your account by engaging with content just on your niche. Look forward to the next experiment!

yoshyosh | 1 year ago | on: Examples of Great URL Design (2023)

Love this. A big miss teams have are with affiliate/refer a friend urls. Like if you think of your Uber referral code being 5 characters instead of a general 16 character hash. Shorter makes it easier for people to remember and share their code.

e.g. RJF01 vs ab0fhct99fh2h4fqi2fj9

yoshyosh | 2 years ago | on: User Driven UI

Really good article! I like how it framed simplicity and complexity of apps, and how users want to stay in a certain zone.

I know the example was trite but future UIs will just allow the user to type or speak what they're trying to do. For example coloring in the circle/triangle will literally require you to say just that.

Whenever I see how people are cropping, masking, and adjusting an image, it already feels so outdated with what AI feels like it will be able to do based on text/voice input.

yoshyosh | 3 years ago | on: Ask HN: How are you using GPT to be productive?

There's no UI, I think humans need a bit of affordance and are bad at keeping things in memory. So while it may be good in answers/understanding, the applications where it can be leveraged are more limited

yoshyosh | 3 years ago | on: Ask HN: Comment here about whatever you're passionate about at the moment

Mostly trouble sourcing the corn from Mexico I believe. https://taiyari.nl/ serves most Mexican places in The Netherlands. It's still not as soft as you'd get from a really freshly made one, although they sell the raw masa as well. The best hack I've found is actually cooking the corn tortillas in a bit of oil to soften them up quite a bit. Works great even with older/frozen tortillas.

I haven't found good flour tortillas, curious what your source is here!

yoshyosh | 3 years ago | on: Ask HN: Comment here about whatever you're passionate about at the moment

Mexican food! I've spent the past 3 years learning to recreate good tortillas. I live abroad in Amsterdam and miss it so much after living in California for decades. I even worked in the best Mexican restaurant in Amsterdam for a month just to learn some of the subtle techniques.

I'm finally at a place where I can make tacos much better than what I would get here and even back in California. I'm currently working on burritos as the next project.

yoshyosh | 3 years ago | on: Ask HN: How to find what I am really good at?

The most helpful things I've seen in quick summary are journaling around work: 1. What gives you energy 2. What feels like work/takes away energy

Use that list to double check against any opportunity you're deciding to pursue, aiming for things that primarily give you energy.

To figure out what you may want to pursue, another helpful exercise is listing 3 people you'd like to be like, and 3 companies/roles you'd like to do for work.

Lastly the Ikigai framework can be used as well to double check your decision.

With the combination of these, I think that's one of the fastest ways to discovery (for your current abilities), since it will help you find what you like and what is sustainable which usually leads to inevitable mastery

yoshyosh | 3 years ago | on: I thought I’d have accomplished a lot more today and also before I was 35 (2020)

Highly recommend checking out the Wheel of Life[1], to help you understand the different areas that contribute to happiness, it's never just one thing. Writing down what you think will get an area to a 10, envisioning it, then seeing if you feel that would feel like a 10 is a great way to uncover where you may be overthinking what gets you there before doing all that work.

Gratitude should also help with each area that you feel is fulfilled, otherwise you just never have enough

[1] https://www.mindtools.com/pages/article/newHTE_93.htm

yoshyosh | 4 years ago | on: Web3 – A Vision for a Decentralized Web

And that last statement is where all the magic is happening. Currently your statement is true, but in the future that's what changes.

My money that is stored in some bank's DB is not on my local computer, but I sure hope it's mine. In some countries they aren't so lucky and it's exactly as you say, the money doesn't belong to them.

yoshyosh | 4 years ago | on: Call it a comeback: Turntable.fm raises $7.5M

I personally felt this experience recently with it's revival. I have a group that was quite active 10 years ago and we got back together for a few weeks once the platform revived. Unfortunately the room died out soon after. For me personally it was just easier to use Spotify due to built up playlists, mobile app, discovery weekly etc. I also felt a lot of pressure needing to be the DJ, rebuilding my playlist (some songs not available in certain countries) and always upvoting songs to not get kicked off stage. I hope they can continue to innovate in the space and carve out more sticky use cases.

The landscape/competition is vastly different today

yoshyosh | 4 years ago | on: Headless WYSISWYG Text Editor – tiptap editor

headless instantly made sense to me, I was thinking of it like contentful/headless shopify even if there is a little bit of a gui. I interpreted it as something I'd have maximum control over in just one word.

yoshyosh | 5 years ago | on: How to price your SaaS product

As a customer that definitely makes a lot of sense from a pure cost POV, but as a business (depending on the SaaS) they technically are unlocking a ton more value for you as you scale. To not price accordingly feels like it would be bad overall for both businesses. CAC is only increasing as competition grows, the SaaS needs to devote revenue to both marketing and product, successful customers can help fund the SaaS so they can continue to build more value for your business, unlocking again more potential revenue for both sides.

If you pay a flat fee, it's possible that your business eventually outgrows the SaaS in some shape/form leading you to switch to a more mature product that charges more. I think this balance is why well aligned value based pricing keeps everyone aligned for the long term.

yoshyosh | 5 years ago | on: How to price your SaaS product

Agreed with this, would not recommend trying to do metered/per unit pricing (that developers may be used to) if your customers aren't familiar with that. We've found that customers readily accept/understand tier based pricing. We literally just changed higher plans from usage based to blocks/tiers of usage based e.g. up to X units per plan
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