HackerTrans
TopNewTrendsCommentsPastAskShowJobs

mbym

no profile record

comments

mbym
·2 tahun yang lalu·discuss
I’m super excited for this! That demo site is so fast (I love Next.js).

And this is awesome: “No additional tools and no [separate] databases - just Next.js and Stripe… Stripe handles the backend”. I once built a website where I stored everything in Stripe. It made it so quick to get started, and I can use the Stripe admin dashboard to make edits.
mbym
·11 tahun yang lalu·discuss
Very helpful, cheers. "The more progress you make on the business, the easier it will be to get a great cofounder" -- agreed -- and being accepted to YC would itself more than help convince people to join the team also :) I hope there are more Drew Houstons out there with confidence to apply.
mbym
·11 tahun yang lalu·discuss
Question re solo founders: "A startup is too much work for one person" and if you can't convince even one friend to join you, that doesn't speak well for your idea! On the other hand, a bad hire/partnership can ruin the company. YC gives signal it really prefers to look at teams than individual applications. Q: Do you have have advice or rules of thumb re how much time a solo founder should put into finding partner(s)? Or thoughts re how much to prioritise this, vs. just writing code and talking to users to finish initial version yourself? I don't mean this to be just focused on "getting into YC" but more in general: what's the right way to think about fixing this problem (being a solo founder) vs tackling other things like actually building something initial users can be using? For software ideas surely it is occasionally sensible to make at least a prototype and actually get some users before ever buddying up? Or if I've got this far but am basically still going it alone, am I doing something wrong?