Do ask: On a scale of 1 (not likely at all) to 10 (very likely) how likely would you be to use the product? Why? On a scale of 1 (not likely at all) to 10 (very likely), how likely would you be to use the product if it did x? Why?
How does a 10 point scale reflects the performance of a product?
I am still trying to understand how's your product looks like. How would you help strangers like me who only have 20 sec on a website to understand what you up to?
Great concept. The other day I stumbled upon https://podcastle.ai/ - I am wondering what makes your product different and how's the performance of conversion so far?
I got very excited at that link and then progressively more and more disappointed. Why do they have a slick animated ad reel with no example of the speech output? Why is there no example anywhere, even on YouTube? What's the point of this as a chrome extension when you can already say "ok Google, read aloud"?
Maybe I'm just salty that I'll never find a good solution for my favorite ebooks that never got an audiobook version.
I think SeeLink is the most accessible way to share links with friends and family at the moment, since it offers a ton of link specific features that make sharing links with groups of people easier
I haven't really thought about adding new features by now. I did it to learn some more advanced techniques in the first place. But maybe I will work on it in the future to improve it further. Though, the focus will remain on adding notes / organizing different pages of notes.
You're not alone. We read and learned so much from you. And your moderation makes our knowledge hunt simpler. I'm wondering what would be your next milestone to make HN more useful?
The next big milestones are to finish a new Arc implementation that should help with our performance issues—I've been stuck on that forever. And then to build the next version of the API.
I am a bit confused on this:
Do ask: On a scale of 1 (not likely at all) to 10 (very likely) how likely would you be to use the product? Why? On a scale of 1 (not likely at all) to 10 (very likely), how likely would you be to use the product if it did x? Why?
How does a 10 point scale reflects the performance of a product?