Like everyone else has said, the idea is cool. Other than that, and this might be harsh, but I don't think you could execute 99% of people's ideas and make a MVP. That's just how I feel after exploring this site for 3 minutes. The blog post about this website is a joke:
"I built my MVP (ibuildmvps.com) in less than two hours. Most of the time was spent waiting for godaddy to process my domain name and email address, and set up the hosting. Besides that, I found a free template online, built a button from a free form generator, created a Google Form, and tweaked the hell out of it. I also added links to many lean startup/customer develop icons who I admire."
This is cute, but it only makes me have less faith in you because none of it is impressive, so how would you implement my idea if it requires a little bit more than using google forms and pre-made templates? The description of the blog on the right hand side rubbed me the wrong way as well. My father has been programming since 1999, or so he would tell people, so the fact that you've been coding since 2002 does nothing for me. You don't have a portfolio anywhere to prove you know what you're actually doing. And if you're going to put your college and state that you received a Bachelors of Science degree at least put what the hell you got it in...
"I built my MVP (ibuildmvps.com) in less than two hours. Most of the time was spent waiting for godaddy to process my domain name and email address, and set up the hosting. Besides that, I found a free template online, built a button from a free form generator, created a Google Form, and tweaked the hell out of it. I also added links to many lean startup/customer develop icons who I admire."
This is cute, but it only makes me have less faith in you because none of it is impressive, so how would you implement my idea if it requires a little bit more than using google forms and pre-made templates? The description of the blog on the right hand side rubbed me the wrong way as well. My father has been programming since 1999, or so he would tell people, so the fact that you've been coding since 2002 does nothing for me. You don't have a portfolio anywhere to prove you know what you're actually doing. And if you're going to put your college and state that you received a Bachelors of Science degree at least put what the hell you got it in...