- Daylight Goals ( https://daylightgoals.com ) - I’m releasing a major update later this month, it is an app built around pushing you to spend more time outdoors in the sun, using automatic time in daylight tracking via the Apple Watch & Apple Health. The update reorganizes the app and adds a lot more dynamic notifications.
- HourStream ( https://hourstream.com ) - A project based time tracking & invoicing app I built for myself, as I’ve moved to consulting work and I’ve disliked basically every invoice tracking app I’ve tried. Still have a lot of things I want to add, but it is getting there.
Hmm, you could probably setup ad hoc builds and send them off to Firebase App Distribution or a similar service and get them a bit faster. Still pretty cumbersome but it skips the slow signing/slow uploads/slow processing that Test Flight provides for users.
In this case you are spot on, the landing page is AI generated, just because I've never enjoyed doing front-end web development myself. That plus this app is very deeply rooted in Apple's platforms (Essentially requiring an Apple Watch to be effective), the majority of users are coming from app store search directly, rather than through the landing page.
Thanks! I'm looking into Vitamin D estimation for a future version, the main issue is there are a ton of factors that need to be considered, the main one is simply how much skin you have exposed when you are outdoors. A simple question but it requires a dedicated user to update the app with their wardrobe every day.
Which "user" are you referring to? Cloudflare users or end product users?
End product users have no power, they can complain to support and maybe get a free month of service, but the 0.1% of customers that do that aren't going to turn the tide and have anything change.
Engineering teams using these services also get "covered" by them - they can finger point and say "everyone else was down too."
> I don't understand how anyone can use LLMs and not see this instantly
Because people in general are not thorough. I've been playing around with Claude Code and before that, Cursor. And both are great tools when targeted correctly. But I've also tried "Vibe" coding with them and it is obvious where people get fooled - it will build a really nice looking shell of a product that appears to be working, but then you step into using it past the surface layer and issues start to show. Most people don't look past the surface layer, and instead keep digging in having the agent build on the crappy foundation, until some time later it all falls apart (And since a lot of these people aren't developers, they have also never heard of source control.)
I find a similar thing with budgeting apps. Manually tracking requires effort and for you to think twice before every purchase, whereas automatic transaction syncing with your bank means you can just not think about it.
In the case of dieting/calorie counting - I don't think you can get away with not thinking about it, especially with inaccurate estimates.
I've used the AI features in Lose It and was pretty impressed, not for the caloric estimate, but when given a picture of a breakfast burrito it accurately split it out into the component parts, from there I could manually adjust amounts easily for food I make without having to manually search out every ingredient manually. As an additional tool it is great.
The issue of course is these new apps built with a sole focus of AI images for tracking. With a photo of restaurant food you can't see a sauce and the 5-10g of additional sugar content, can't get accurate guesses of what is in breads/pastas and figuring out general volumes of foods is not possible unless you have some kind of standard size reference in the frame.
Honestly the best use case i have seen is the ability to read a labels and add it to the database. (Similar to an OCR but better)
Correcting errors in MFP is the bane of my existence.
I have tried some other apps but i hated every single one of them for a reason or another and came back to MFP but that was one of the best features i would really love to have
- Daylight Goals ( https://daylightgoals.com ) - I’m releasing a major update later this month, it is an app built around pushing you to spend more time outdoors in the sun, using automatic time in daylight tracking via the Apple Watch & Apple Health. The update reorganizes the app and adds a lot more dynamic notifications.
- HourStream ( https://hourstream.com ) - A project based time tracking & invoicing app I built for myself, as I’ve moved to consulting work and I’ve disliked basically every invoice tracking app I’ve tried. Still have a lot of things I want to add, but it is getting there.
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