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paulwilsonn

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1 points·by paulwilsonn·7 bulan yang lalu·0 comments

Ask HN: What Are You Working On? (Mid – December 2025)

1 points·by paulwilsonn·7 bulan yang lalu·1 comments

Ask HNIs early-stage fundraising broken,or founders just pitching the wrong way?

3 points·by paulwilsonn·7 bulan yang lalu·0 comments

Ask HN: How did your startup get its first real users?

2 points·by paulwilsonn·8 bulan yang lalu·3 comments

Cloudflare is down and causing outages at X, OpenAI

4 points·by paulwilsonn·8 bulan yang lalu·1 comments

Ask HN: Anyone here building tools that help founders raise funds?

2 points·by paulwilsonn·8 bulan yang lalu·0 comments

Ask HN: Startups should brag less and ship more (guilty as charged)

3 points·by paulwilsonn·8 bulan yang lalu·9 comments

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1 points·by paulwilsonn·8 bulan yang lalu·0 comments

Ask HN: What are you Building Now?

1 points·by paulwilsonn·8 bulan yang lalu·4 comments

Ask HN: I underestimated how lonely building solo can be

56 points·by paulwilsonn·8 bulan yang lalu·41 comments

Ask HN: What Are You Building?

1 points·by paulwilsonn·9 bulan yang lalu·1 comments

Ask HN: What's the most underrated skill for startup founders in 2025?

1 points·by paulwilsonn·9 bulan yang lalu·1 comments

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1 points·by paulwilsonn·9 bulan yang lalu·0 comments

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1 points·by paulwilsonn·9 bulan yang lalu·0 comments

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1 points·by paulwilsonn·9 bulan yang lalu·0 comments

Ask HN: What's working for founders raising without warm intros in 2025?

3 points·by paulwilsonn·9 bulan yang lalu·0 comments

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1 points·by paulwilsonn·9 bulan yang lalu·0 comments

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1 points·by paulwilsonn·9 bulan yang lalu·0 comments

Ask HN: What's missing in today's fundraising tools for founders?

1 points·by paulwilsonn·9 bulan yang lalu·0 comments

Ask HN: How are founders finding investors without warm intros in 2025?

4 points·by paulwilsonn·9 bulan yang lalu·12 comments

comments

paulwilsonn
·8 bulan yang lalu·discuss
We recently launched CapitalReach.ai - https://capitalreach.ai We built it to make fundraising easier for founders, it uses AI to help you:

1. Find and match with the right investors automatically 2. Personalize and automate outreach campaigns 3. Track investor responses and manage your fundraising pipeline in one place

The goal isn’t to replace the hustle, just to remove the repetitive parts so founders can focus on building relationships.

Would love honest feedback from fellow founders and investors here:

Does this solve a real pain point for you?

What feels missing or unnecessary?

How do you currently manage investor outreach today?
paulwilsonn
·8 bulan yang lalu·discuss
A mechanical keyboard with too many fancy switches and lights. I thought it would make coding feel better, but it just ended up being noisy and distracting. I went back to a simple, quiet one and realized comfort matters way more than looks.
paulwilsonn
·8 bulan yang lalu·discuss
I wouldn’t recommend it at that age. ChatGPT can sound confident even when it’s wrong, and kids might take answers at face value without questioning them.

It’s also easy to get distracted or rely on it too much instead of developing real problem-solving skills. Better to wait until they’re a bit older and can use it critically with proper context.
paulwilsonn
·8 bulan yang lalu·discuss
Totally fair concern. Sharing code publicly can feel risky, but it’s also one of the best ways to learn and build credibility. If plagiarism worries you, start by open-sourcing smaller or older projects, or parts of a larger one that aren’t critical.

People rarely gain much from just copying code; what stands out is your process, documentation, and improvement over time. Eventually, the benefits of visibility usually outweigh the risks.
paulwilsonn
·8 bulan yang lalu·discuss
Exactly. Early execution speaks volumes - even a rough prototype shows they’re serious and capable of turning ideas into reality.
paulwilsonn
·8 bulan yang lalu·discuss
Absolutely. A tangible product, even if rough, shows execution and commitment. Ideas are easy -prototypes prove there’s real traction.
paulwilsonn
·8 bulan yang lalu·discuss
This looks great - Trello’s 1D limitation always felt constraining. Love the “row dimension” concept and the minimalist stack. Please share when it’s live - would love to try it out early!
paulwilsonn
·8 bulan yang lalu·discuss
That’s a great reflection. Celebrating milestones solo can feel hollow, but it’s part of the craftsperson’s journey. The watchmaker analogy fits perfectly - building intricate, meaningful things that most people never fully see or understand.
paulwilsonn
·8 bulan yang lalu·discuss
“Solo, together” - I really like that framing. It captures the best of both worlds: independence without isolation. It’s almost like the modern-day version of guilds — individual creators building side by side.
paulwilsonn
·8 bulan yang lalu·discuss
Fair point - feedback from actual customers keeps you grounded in reality. Cofounders can motivate you, but customers validate you. The “cool-aid” risk is real when everyone around you shares the same bias.
paulwilsonn
·8 bulan yang lalu·discuss
Coworking spaces can be great if you find the right vibe. The energy of being around other builders or creatives really helps with momentum - though it’s easy to end up socializing more than working if you’re not careful. Balance is key.
paulwilsonn
·8 bulan yang lalu·discuss
Because browsers treat QR codes as images, not data. They don’t natively parse or extract links unless you use a camera or scanner API.

It’s mostly a UX and security choice-automatically turning any image with a QR into a clickable link could be abused for phishing or tracking.

That said, it’d be cool if browsers offered a “Scan QR in page” option like mobile OSes do.
paulwilsonn
·8 bulan yang lalu·discuss
That’s a really good observation- I’ve noticed the same. I think it’s because game dev and startup culture overlap less than we expect.

Game dev usually leans more art and creativity than problem-solving or scalable business models.

Different mindset, funding path, and timelines. Though lately, game dev tools and AI pipelines are starting to bridge that gap.
paulwilsonn
·9 bulan yang lalu·discuss
For me, focus comes from reducing noise, not forcing discipline. I block 2–3 hour deep work windows, cut low-impact tasks weekly, and walk between contexts to reset. Sleep and exercise do more for focus than any app or hack.
paulwilsonn
·9 bulan yang lalu·discuss
I hit deep burnout after ~3 years of nonstop startup grind. What helped wasn’t small fixes — it was stepping away completely for a few weeks. It took time just to stop thinking in “crisis mode.” I stopped feeling guilty about rest, reconnected with things outside work (walking, cooking, reading), and talked with other founders who’d been there. Almost all had the same story. When I came back, I rebuilt around sustainability - fewer hero sprints, clearer boundaries. Burnout wasn’t failure; it was feedback that the way I was working wasn’t sustainable.
paulwilsonn
·9 bulan yang lalu·discuss
Use AI to speed up the boring parts, but make sure you understand what’s happening behind the scenes. The best programmers in the AI era aren’t the fastest coders - they’re the ones who can debug, reason, and connect systems creatively.
paulwilsonn
·9 bulan yang lalu·discuss
I agree with you
paulwilsonn
·9 bulan yang lalu·discuss
HN can still work, but it’s niche. Most opportunities are for senior engineers, founders, or highly technical roles, not general job listings. The signal-to-noise ratio is high - you won’t see volume like LinkedIn, but the connections and leads you get here tend to be higher quality.
paulwilsonn
·9 bulan yang lalu·discuss
It’s basically a scale problem. Modern smartphones are insanely complex: custom chips, radios, antennas, battery/thermal management, and tight OS-hardware integration. Doing software only is feasible for a small team, but building a full open-source phone from scratch would need hundreds of engineers and billions in investment - which is why almost everyone focuses on OS mods instead.
paulwilsonn
·9 bulan yang lalu·discuss
Yeah, I’ve noticed the same trend - Facebook’s recommendation algorithm seems to have gone off the rails lately. It’s aggressively pushing shocking or borderline content to maximize engagement. What’s scary is how subtle it’s become - it’s not explicit, but it plays on outrage or taboo just enough to keep people watching.

Feels like the platform is optimizing purely for watch time, not safety or decency anymore.