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Sorted App + Build Lab
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Sorted App + Build Lab
@getSortedAppios
Free supplement tracker for real routines. Built with AI; sharing the prompts, mistakes, and release lessons behind it.
Inscrit le Nisan 2026
391 Abonnements25 Abonnés

@CaptainInsightX the "failing for a reason nobody understands" one is provisioning profiles for me. every time.
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Shipping a mobile app in 2026:
• Framework: React Native (until it breaks)
• iOS build: failing for a reason nobody understands
• Android build: failing for a different reason nobody understands
• App size: 200MB
• Features: 3
• Permissions: yes
• Push notifications: worked once, in dev
• Test device: the founder’s phone
• Crash reports: from devices you don’t own
• App Store review: rejected, reason 4.3
Featured by Apple.
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@chams_builds two. Codex did most of the build, Claude Code covered whenever credits ran out.
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26 agentic AI tools. Be honest, how many have you actually shipped something with? Not tried once. Shipped.
Platforms:
🤖 Claude Code
🧑💻 Claude Cowork
⌨️ Codex
🪐 Antigravity
🦞 OpenClaw
📨 Hermes
🖱️ Cursor
🐙 GitHub Copilot
🌊 Windsurf
👷 Devin
▶️ Replit Agent
💬 ChatGPT Agent
✨ Gemini
🔎 Perplexity
🖐️ Manus
🔺 v0
💗 Lovable
⚡ Bolt
Orchestration/support tools:
📚 LLM Wiki
🧠 Gbrain
🔮 Obsidian
🔗 LangSmith (evals + observability)
🪢 LangGraph (orchestration)
🔄 n8n (automation)
📓 NotebookLM (knowledge)
🧵 Mem0 (memory)
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@SofaMods the building part is more doable than people think. signing and provisioning was the only stretch that really fought me. good luck with the launch.
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#pitchyagame Break Orbit (working title): I'm trying to prototype a cozy-ish game about living aboard your space ship, keeping it flying, and yourself alive, by picking through space trash, deorbiting wrecks, and taking any other jobs you can in the war-torn orbit of a gas giant.
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@Layton_Gott the copy-paste era was real. I started the same way, pasting screenshots back into chat to explain layout bugs. watching codex click through the simulator on its own now feels like a different decade.
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A year and a half ago I was "coding" by copy pasting from ChatGPT into VS Code by hand...
Every single line. Input. Output. Back and forth.
I didn't know any better.
I was 15, no coding experience whatsoever, trying to build an AI video generator with no clue what I was doing.
To me that was coding.
Open ChatGPT, ask for a chunk of code, copy it, paste it into VS Code, run it, copy the error back.
Over and over for hours.
Then this January my oldest brother told me how good Claude was.
So I went looking. Every post said the same thing:
"This is way better than ChatGPT." And while I was reading I saw it had its own coding assistant called Claude Code.
I figured it was just a better way to copy paste.
A better version of what I was already doing.
So I had ChatGPT walk me through installing it into VS Code.
Then I typed my first prompt for the video generator and hit enter.
And it just... went. Finding the files it needed.
Writing across all of them.
Doing in seconds what took me an entire afternoon by hand.
I sat there just staring at my screen.
DANG!
I couldn't fathom it at the time.
I'd spent months doing it the hard way and never once knew there was another way.
That was the moment I stopped messing around and actually wanted to build.
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@svpino I run mine similarly. the code review still happens, it's just AI doing it. one reviewer only checks security, one tries to break it like an angry user.
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Somebody I know shipped a product a couple of months ago, and he is already making money.
He doesn't care about the code. Has no clue whether it's good code or bad code. Has never looked at it once because he can't even understand it.
But he is making money and that's all he cares about.
I'm a code nerd, but I'd honestly take messy code that makes money over perfect, beautiful code that doesn't.
Vibe-coding is a superpower for people with good ideas and the willingness to put in the work.
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@PaulSolt the motivation part is the real unlock. every project I abandoned died at one wall I didn't understand and I'd just quietly stop opening the folder. nice to finally have something that drags you past it.
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Codex unblocked my app development progress and solved my motivation problem for updating an old, “soon to be removed” Mac app.
My app has made $5k in revenue over it’s lifetime, but it’s been on a downward trend for the last 6 years…
I never updated it because the amount of deprecated code kept growing, and Apple’s constant updates always break or add new requirements.
That changed with Codex this past year. I was able to give it a task that blocked me, not because it was hard, but because my motivation to dig into the problem was super low. I have a family, 2 daughters, exercise (run + ultimate), and a 9-5 job. That made it difficult to find time, and then combined with low energy + hard problems … made it so updates never happened.
The further you get away from old code, the longer it takes to remember what you were doing, and deprecated code means finding new ways to do things that used to just work.
Honestly, sometimes I wish my apps would keep working like they used to, but the constant iOS or macOS updates means there’s some level of maintenance.
When an app only makes $10-$30 per month … it’s hard to make time for it…
… But my app wasn’t going to work on the next macOS update, so I guess Apple lite a fire under my butt to get it working for the new update.
That actually got me excited about the app, and I after I fixed the deprecated problems, I threw an experimental UI at Codex to apply, and it integrated it. Now I finally unblocked the two things that were previously holding me back.
For the past two nights I’ve been up until 1am or 12am working on bug fixes and shipping new versions on TestFlight (Apple’s beta service).
I’m really excited about all the new features in the app, because they bring quality of live improvements that I have wanted for years, but never found time to implement with all of lifes other responsibilities.
I no longer have to have perfect energy to get into code and be productive. I can just talk to Codex and it will do what I ask.
It’s not perfect, and often it messes up with Mac app development, but it’s good enough to get me going, so that I can redirect it when it’s wrong.
Pittsford, NY 🇺🇸 English

@aaliya_va this is the exact wall I'm on. the build was the fun part, 'can anyone find it' is the actual job. nobody's coming for a thing they've never heard of.
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Building is now the easy part
A weekend,a laptop,a few prompts n you have got a working app.
The moat used to be:
can you build it?
now the moat is:
can anyone find it?
Levels.io nailed in this tweet. In an AI world where every coder,freelancer and founder can ship product in days ,the hard wall isn't code anymore,Its distribution as distribution doesn't care how good your product is.
The builders who win aren't necessarily the most technical.They are the ones with a story people follow bfore the product even launches.
Thats the new moat:
the founder as narrator
When you are building in public sharing the why behind the idea,the failures at 2am,the ugly pivot ,you are not just documenting,you are compounding trust.
Your audience becomes your waitlist
Your story becomes your funnel
Your credibility becomes your ad budget
VC money buys distribution through ads.Influencers trade equity for reach .both are real n both work.
well the foundernarrator?
I believe thats the third path and its the most durable one
we see all the time audiences built around a person don't get switched off by an algorithm update or a rising CPM,they show up because they believe in where you are going.
Look at every founder with a cult like following.They didn't just build a product,they brought people inside the process and made the journey the content.
AI just lowered the cost of building to nearly zero.
What it can't replicate is your perspective,your experience,your earned credibility.
That's the moat now.
x.com/levelsio/statu…
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@NickADobos the voice-while-using-it loop is the one that broke my brain. describing what's wrong out loud while tapping through the actual screen and watching it get fixed live still doesn't feel real.
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Current dev loop:
Talk to phone -> app appears
1. Connect codex to Mac and iPhone
2. Make an iPhone app and deploy it to my phone
3. Open codex on phone, open voice mode
and ramble for 10 minutes while using my app.
Pro tip voice mode stays on even if the codex ios app is in the background
4. Once you are ready, end with: “make a prioritized list of updates and then do them, then rebuild to my phone”
So all I do is test and ramble about what’s wrong and needs fixing. I basically just dictate for 10 mins while using my app and then spend 1 minute in codex sending stuff and reading. Then flip back and continue playing with my app
Repeat
——
For non-team projects I never read code anymore. Only prompts and chat are worth reading. Everything else is simply using the software, fully experiencing it and feeling it, and shaping the ideal into pixels and data.
My ideas manifested in machines within seconds
Lightning in a rock in your pocket.
Pure magic
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@heccbrent ha the "are you sure?" move is real. since I'm on ios I started mirroring my iphone to the desktop so codex can watch the app run live on the actual device, not just the simulator. caught stuff that only ever showed up on real hardware.
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@getSortedAppios It really is! Sometimes I'll throw in a little vague "are you sure that's right?" just to see what it'll fix 😆
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You can now do so much more when building iOS apps without ever leaving the Codex app 📱
See SwiftUI previews and even test your app in the simulator using the in-app browser (including annotation support for making edits!).
OpenAI Developers@OpenAIDevs
More of the iOS app loop, now inside Codex. The Build iOS Apps plugin lets Codex view and test your iOS app in the in-app browser, open SwiftUI previews, and hot reload edits without leaving Codex.
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@compileandpush @BillyBowss mostly after, but not by hand. I built a QAT agent and trained it to think through a real test plan: cases, happy path, the nasty negative ones. then consulted with it on where TDD actually fit the app vs where it was just ceremony. catches stuff I wouldn't know to look for.
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@getSortedAppios @BillyBowss TDD is right in theory and awkward in practice for most builders. Do you write tests before or after and why?
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@hqmank my favorite part now is watching codex or claude just fly through every screen running the UAT and smoke tests in my simulator setup. used to be me tapping through each one by hand like a maniac. now I make coffee and watch it go.
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@getSortedAppios Exactly. For non-devs, the simulator makes it feel real instead of just staring at files. That’s a huge unlock.
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Codex is getting the iOS loop that actually matters.
See the running app. Click through the simulator. Open SwiftUI previews. Hot reload edits without leaving the workspace.
The shift is simple: the agent can debug UI with visual feedback, not pasted screenshots.
OpenAI Developers@OpenAIDevs
More of the iOS app loop, now inside Codex. The Build iOS Apps plugin lets Codex view and test your iOS app in the in-app browser, open SwiftUI previews, and hot reload edits without leaving Codex.
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@BillyBowss honestly codex is what got me unstuck. it ran the tests and reviews right in my browser, took over xcode when I needed it, and a lot of nights it was just me brainstorming with it til something clicked. without that I'd have quit around screen two.
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@getSortedAppios Congrats! You could have fully done it with Claude. You can even do the full setup on the Apple Store Connect website using Claude directly in Chrome. 😁
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@thegarybrecka consistency being on a "free" list is funny. it's the one thing there I actually fail at. cost me nothing and I still couldn't do it, which is why I ended up building myself a logger.
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The health industry doesn't want you to know this. The best biohacks in life are free.
All of these are not trendy supplements or biohacking gadgets. They are the foundational inputs your body was literally designed to run on and every single one of them is free.
Circadian alignment alone changes everything. When you eat, sleep, and move in sync with your natural light cycle your hormones regulate themselves, your energy stabilizes, and your mental clarity improves without changing a single thing in your diet or supplement stack.
Breathwork can pull your nervous system out of a stress response in minutes. Fasting gives your digestive system the rest it needs to repair and reset. None of this requires a credit card.
The most powerful thing I can tell anyone who wants to feel better is this. Lock in the free stuff first. Master it completely. Then layer anything else on top.
👇🏻 Which one on this list are you already doing? Drop it in the comments.

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@MOZAICTECK the "two entry points, only one covered" thing is the bug I make constantly. no backend on my side so it's never webhooks - it's me fixing a thing in one screen and forgetting the identical logic lives in another. found one last month that'd been broken since launch.
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Honestly, the event plumbing caught me more than the webhook itself. The webhook concept clicked fast. What got me was realizing Google OAuth registration goes through a completely separate function in my code. The /register endpoint had the notification, but google_callback had nothing. There were two entry points; only one was covered. That's where the real debugging happened.
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@compileandpush honestly the daily "log it" tap, and that's on me. I kept bolting on features instead of nailing the one basic thing people actually open the app for. all that extra stuff made the simplest, most important action easy to lose.
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@getSortedAppios This looks like a workflow built from real pain points. Which step in the flow still feels most fragile?
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@sreenandhanpp congrats on 1.2k 🚀 non-dev here who shipped a free iOS app with AI (a supplement tracker), still slightly stunned it's real. happy to connect.
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