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I originally built https://prontopic.com/ to help my girlfriend take better photos of her clothes for Vinted.

Turns out people really like it, especially for food photography :)


I'm curious as I have not idea how you do this, but do you prompt a GenAI model with an image to generate an output image? What happens if the image is not 1:1 accurate?


I guess they’ll text me or stop using the service. With food is much better.


Even in the demo image in the hero section you can notice that the "AI generated" costume is not the same as the "real image" one.


Yes, it derails a bit when it has to reproduce creative patterns


I’m currently developing a link-in-bio tool that requires no cookies, no trackers, and no signups—a true “privacy-first” approach. I’m building it with lovable, which has really helped me overcome the fine-tuning and bug-fixing procrastination that used to slow down my projects.

After spending a lot of time in an acquired startup and becoming more specialized in my role, I realized I needed to switch back to “build mode.” It’s been a rewarding exercise to try generating some organic traffic (no-ads by design) and a much needed escape from excel sheets.

https://barelink.lovable.app/

Wondering if being still on a third level domain is messing up my SEO efforts.


Do you use any analytics tools on your website and how do you drive traffic to it?

Are you planning no-ads campaigns (similar to what simpleanalytics.com does)?

I'm on a privacy-first project and such info would help.


Working on https://someguys.app to make it easier for people to find sports meet-ups and stay active, whether at home or exploring a new city. Personally, I’ve always found it tough to stay motivated and consistent with sports after retiring from 25 years of semi-professional sport, especially solo. Having a group around makes all the difference, but it’s not always easy to find one—especially for sports that aren’t as mainstream or easy to organize.

With Someguys, you can find others to play with, including adaptive sports options for people with disabilities. It works for individuals looking to discover new activities, and also for clubs, providing tools to organize, promote, and make events more accessible.


It looks promising! One thing to consider adding is integration with Meta Pixel and Google Ads, as these are crucial for any e-commerce platform.


> these are crucial for any e-commerce platform

For sure not. I'm running a seven figure shop without any of that.


I love running ads against my own products, thereby shooting myself in the foot for the pennies when I could be earning dollars. /s


I work for iubenda (https://www.iubenda.com/) and it's a precious tool for website compliance. I was a user myself before joining the team.

You can get: Privacy Policy/T&C/Cookie and Consent Banner as well as a Consent Database tool.

The onboarding starts with a scan of your website, and you are suggested to use specific configurations based on the legislation that will apply to your website. Moreover, iubenda scans regularly your website and checks for non-compliance clues (e.g. a missing service in your privacy policy).

Pricing: there's a free plan for you to start with a basic configuration + pay as you grow.


Feinstein selling $ALLO on Feb 18th. Not a good call, I'd say.


Agreed - and she says it was her husband and not her. There needs to be a law that politicians are no longer single people but in fact come as a package - and politicians should have 0 expectation of privacy as they serve the public.


Still applies to standard insider trading law. It's not like a CEO's spouse can trade the company's stock after hearing about his/her day at work.


I still believe in the value of individuality. Politiciants should have same expectation of privacy as regular citizens.

Transactions should not.


The argument that politicians should have the same expectation of privacy as regular citizens while also making their stock transparent is inherently contradictory. Regular citizens do not have to make their stock transactions public, but politicians should be required to.

I think it’s entirely reasonable for politicians to assume a life of less privacy since every aspect of their lives is scrutinized by the press anyway.


This whole debate stems from the fact that we have career politicians, which (at the federal level, at least) is not what the founders envisioned. A citizen legislature cannot, by definition, exist when it's filled by people who have never had a real job.

Term limits fixes this from both ends. Politicians are allowed their privacy, because they're just regular people and nobody is going to get rid from a single Senate term or 3-4 House terms. It eliminates the incentive to associate one's self more with DC than your home district. And it would probably result in people having a better opinion of Congress as a whole because it's not filled with people who have never done anything else.


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