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idearoots

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idearoots
·há 3 anos·discuss
you could try https://neuracache.com/
idearoots
·há 3 anos·discuss
I had a similar discussion with a friend lately.

From analytics (mine [0] and friends) on various iOS apps, around 3-8% of active users use the widget.

So this answers the question partially = only a small percent of people use widgets. Hence low priority.

iOS widget use depends on the app category also. E.g

- productivity apps have higher widget usage because they have power users, and often users already think in workflows & quick access

- more general users don't care or don't know about widgets at all

That being said, regardless of the category, I always encourage companies to add it. Why?

- the cost is much lower than they usually think

- improves retention

- higher potential of forming a habit

[0] - neuracache.com
idearoots
·há 4 anos·discuss
sorry, yes
idearoots
·há 4 anos·discuss
I wish there was more content like this - "making hundreds (not thousands) of $ in MRR after y years".

Give a dose of realism and pinpoint the second benefit — the skillset that is truly unique and worth it.

You no longer care about an isolated Jira ticket. You see a thread from vision to execution. As a dev, you start to value other parts of the company and build better bridges/interfaces between teams.

As someone said, building something on your own feels like staring into the abyss and eating glass. Be aware, it's not for everyone and can cost you — not only $$$ but relationships and health.

And that is even if you are passionate about the thing.

It reminds me of Steve Jobs's thoughts on this https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PznJqxon4zE&ab_channel=coach...

Having started a side project in 2018 myself (now in low $$$$ MRR), I can attest that passion is key — because it's what you would do in your free time anyway.
idearoots
·há 4 anos·discuss
If the thought is clear, I write it in a paper notebook as nicely as possible — in a "Daily Page" format.

If the thought is unclear, I write random contextual things in RM2 and erase or leave them there to mature or die.

I also use RM2 to read articles, pdfs, and draw or think about them.

So it mainly serves as a thinking space that feels Offline.
idearoots
·há 4 anos·discuss
My non-obvious observation after five years in this field:

In essence, journalling is similar to a psychotherapy session.

The clarity of mind you get after a journalling session comes from structuring things in your head, not in your TfT tool.

Yet, as one would expect, people project that feeling onto a tool — which leads to more time invested.

Ultimately after the N-th session, when you try to use the tool to get more of that feeling — you get the opposite, burnout, and then people switch to a new TfT app for the same cycle.

These benefits are why "Daily Pages" were vital to Roam Research's success. Not the bi-directional links or graphs as many think.

"Daily Pages" get you closer to a new therapeutic session, which is what you want most of the time.

I use :

  - paper notebooks. 
  - remarkable 2 
  - markdown/notion + NeuraCache [I'm a founder] for flashcards and spaced repetition
+ I've been in group and individual therapy for three years now.

I have never been happier with my setup.
idearoots
·há 5 anos·discuss
Hey

• Location: Remote / Poland

• Remote: yes

• Willing to relocate: no

• Technologies: mobile — Android & iOS — Kotlin, Swift, Dart

• Résumé/CV: androidgecko.com

• Email: [email protected]
idearoots
·há 6 anos·discuss
Location: Europe / Poland Remote: Yes Willing to relocate: No

Technologies: Kotlin + Android (mvvm, coroutines, flow, multi-module, dagger, rx, arch components) | also Flutter and Swift (native iOS) | I love mobile :-)

Résumé/CV: androidgecko.com

Email: [email protected]