alex lat

55 posts

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alex lat

alex lat

@alex_ge07

solo founder building AI tools Building https://t.co/ro11wQyafM in public road to 10k MRR

Katılım Nisan 2026
27 Takip Edilen6 Takipçiler
alex lat
alex lat@alex_ge07·
@gregisenberg Same pattern as always: hype first, understanding later
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GREG ISENBERG
GREG ISENBERG@gregisenberg·
AI has a serious branding problem Probably worse than web3/crypto/NFTs if you ask the average person in the streets, they probably fear and hate AI
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Aman Ansari
Aman Ansari@HeyAnsariUX·
AI can never match this level of quality
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alex lat
alex lat@alex_ge07·
Day 4. How many unread emails do you have right now? I had 47,000. Opened my inbox and felt genuine anxiety. Built SpaceBox to fix it for myself. One click, gone. spacebox.website — $0.99. Drop your number below. I know some of you are worse than me.
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alex lat
alex lat@alex_ge07·
Day 4 Google warns you storage is full. But 60% of it is newsletters you never opened and promotions from 2019. You don't need more storage. You need less garbage. spacebox.website — $0.99, one click, gone.
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alex lat
alex lat@alex_ge07·
Day 4 Google warns you storage is full. But 60% of it is newsletters you never opened and promo emails from 2019. You're not disorganized. You're just subsidizing spam. $0.99 cleans it all in one click. spacebox.website
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alex lat
alex lat@alex_ge07·
Day 3 SpaceBox stats: Average inbox scanned: 14,200 emails Useless emails found: 73% Storage freed: 4.1GB You'd spend 2 hours sorting manually and barely make a dent. This does it in one click for $0.99. spacebox.website
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alex lat
alex lat@alex_ge07·
@gregisenberg At this point, rebranding into AI is the ultimate growth hack.
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alex lat
alex lat@alex_ge07·
@bowlcutWiz Congrats that’s awesome, I’d love to do the same
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Wiz
Wiz@bowlcutWiz·
heres another milestone i thought i’d never hit… 1,000 followers! from 200 -> 1000 in 13 days and i didn’t have to sell my soul as a reply guy to do it either. all you gotta do is build cool stuff :) thanks for all the recent support ya’ll 🙏🏻
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alex lat
alex lat@alex_ge07·
@emollick I wonder how complex their ‘language’ really is
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Brett
Brett@BrettFromDJ·
Many such founders will make this mistake. They’ll favor speed and budget over quality and conversion, and end up with a white paper versus an actual landing page. Then they’ll wonder why their conversions dropped, and eventually come running back to designers.
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Dhravya Shah@DhravyaShah

x.com/i/article/2044…

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alex lat
alex lat@alex_ge07·
Day 3 — Google wants $3/mo for more storage. 90% of my used space was promotional emails from 2019. SpaceBox cleaned 4.2GB in one click. That's years of storage back for $0.99. spacebox.website
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alex lat
alex lat@alex_ge07·
@levelsio The audio detail is such a nice touch 🤩
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@levelsio
@levelsio@levelsio·
Lots of updates on my drone war sim @ drone.pieter.com 🌲 Switched to sprite-based trees because 1000s of 3d trees is really heavy, now it's just a Nano Banana tree -> remove bg -> and then rotated 8 times to make a tree, it can even make a forest now without slowing down everything! 🚗 Added lots of moving vehicle enemies now, they shoot at you too and drive around the map 🛣️ Added roads 🏚️ You can use buildings now as cover, so you can fly in them and then shoot from there at enemies, buildings are rendered mostly in @cursor_ai then made into 3d with @tripoai (both sponsors of #vibejam) 📢 Drone and gun sounds are only hearable at your spawn point because that's where you are as a drone operator, when you fly further away the sounds go away and the radio signal noise gets worse
@levelsio@levelsio

✨ Progress on my drone sim 🚁 Drone of War: drone.pieter.com Removed my old giant city FBX, because 1) it wasn't made by AI, 2) it was way too big Made the scenery a sandy war land now and just generating my own 3d assets now with @cursor_ai and @tripoai (sponsors of #vibejam) Also removed the drone sound, I thought a drone operator probably doesn't hear the drone sound anyway (only if it's near them) and I was inspired by @denisbondare to add some sine wave sounds and it made some buddhist type dings that I really like The paradox of war + buddhist sounds is kinda interesting combo, there's something disturbing about drone warfare where it's just people remotely controlling it I wanted to capture that in a game Also added real soldiers models (also generated), they're static though, but they do move, but I need to make them move somehow, not sure how yet, soldiers shoot at you and try take you down Also need to add tanks and other military vehicles that drive around And then I need to add more of a gameplay element, I still think about multiplayer where you choose to be either a drone or a soldier/tank/etc so it's drone vs everyone else! P.S. I can't participate in the #vibejam as the organizer of course but I still like to make some fun games just for fun and to show the tools!

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alex lat
alex lat@alex_ge07·
Day 3 — ran SpaceBox on my own inbox. 47,000 unread emails. 31,000 were pure junk. Gone in one click. 6.1GB freed. That inbox anxiety? Instantly gone. $0.99 at spacebox.website
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alex lat
alex lat@alex_ge07·
Day 2 — Google warns you storage is full. You open Gmail. 34,000 emails. Half are newsletters you never read. You close Gmail. Nobody has 3 hours to fix that manually. SpaceBox does it in one click. $0.99. spacebox.website
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alex lat
alex lat@alex_ge07·
@dvassallo feels like email has been a hidden database all along 😆
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Daniel Vassallo
Daniel Vassallo@dvassallo·
I've been in the process of building a custom home for 5 years. Bought the land in 2021. Got the building permit this year. Haven't started construction yet. During those 5 years, I accumulated thousands of emails with dozens of architects, engineers, surveyors, contractors, government agencies, title companies, and others. Hundreds of PDFs I opened once and never found again. My project management system was email search and my own memory. I could always find individual emails when I needed them. What I couldn't do was see the project. How much money have we actually spent, and on what? Who are all the contractors we talked to, and how did we find each one? What happened with the easement, not one email about it, but the full arc across three years? Why did we stop using the original surveyor? The answers were all in my inbox. But they were spread across hundreds of threads. No single email contained the story. The story only existed in the connections between them. So I tried something. I pointed OpenClaw at my full email inbox and said: read all my emails in chronological order and figure out what happened with this project over the last 5 years. Build me a timeline. Find all the documents. Track the money. Map the people. That's it. I didn't sort anything. I didn't classify anything. I didn't tell it which threads mattered. I just pointed at the inbox and let it work. And it worked way better than I expected. It found 1,850 emails across 450 threads involving 58 people at 35 organizations. From that, it produced 511 timeline events describing what actually happened over 5 years. Not "Daniel emailed the architect" but "Easement delay threatens grading permit" or "architect warns the entire permit depends on securing the neighbor's access agreement." Real project history in PM language. It identified 690 documents and classified each one: invoice, permit, survey map, legal agreement, environmental report, estimate, and so on, and it linked them to the timeline events that referenced them. It extracted 170 finance records from email bodies and PDF attachments. Invoices, payments, estimates, and receipts with amounts, dates, and payees pulled from messy documents. It mapped out 58 contacts with their roles, their organizations, and how they related to the project over time. All interlinked. Click a timeline event, see the emails that produced it and the documents attached. Click a payment, trace it back to the invoice and the email thread. Click a person, see every event they were involved in. It built a dashboard on top of it and for the first time in 5 years, I could actually see the whole project. The full arc. Every dollar. Every person. Every decision. Stitched together from raw correspondence into something I can sit down and browse. The key insight for me was realizing this is basically an ETL process: Extract, Transform, and Load. The emails are the source data. The agent does the extraction from emails and loading into a database. But the really powerful part is the Transform: the LLM reads the raw correspondence with enough context to do intelligent enrichment across hundreds of threads spanning months and years. And by enrichment I don't mean summarization. I mean it actually reconstructed the narrative of the project. It traced how we almost hired the wrong well driller. We originally hired one company, paid a deposit, and were ready to go. Then the architect heard from someone in his network that they weren't reliable. We pivoted to a different driller who came recommended through a chain of referrals the agent traced back to its origin. The new company came out, drilled 140 feet, hit an artesian well with water pressure above ground level, and finished in two weeks. The original deposit got refunded. The agent reconstructed that entire sequence from first contact to final invoice, across dozens of emails and multiple contractors, and presented it as one coherent story. It reconstructed the full permit saga. Four separate permits with the county, each with its own cycle of applications, reviews, correction letters, resubmissions, and approvals. Years of back and forth. The agent built the complete timeline for each permit and linked every document and payment to the right stage. It tracked the money flow end to end. Not just "we paid the architect X." It found every invoice, matched them to the work described in the email threads, categorized the spending, and produced a financial history of the entire project broken down by architect, engineer, surveyor, contractor, county fees, and everything else. It mapped out relationships between people that I had half-forgotten. Which engineer referred which surveyor. Which contractor's crew member later became a separate vendor. Which county reviewer handled which permit. All of it was in the email, I just never had the time to stitch it together myself. One of the most fun things it did was writing honest personality profiles for each contact based purely on their communication style. How responsive they are. How they handle pushback. Whether they tend to over-promise. Whether they're the kind of person who answers at 11pm or takes five days to reply. Reading an AI's unfiltered take on the people you've been doing business with for years, based on nothing but their emails, is surprisingly entertaining and uncomfortably accurate. The thing that surprised me most is how much structure was already hiding in the email. I didn't add information. The agent found what was already there. The timeline, the document graph, the money flows, the cast of characters. It was all latent in the correspondence. Five years of decisions and negotiations and payments, all recorded in email, just never connected. I think a lot of people are sitting on projects like this without realizing it. Your renovation emails are a project database waiting to be assembled. Your legal correspondence is a case file. Your immigration threads are an application history. The raw material has been accumulating for months or years. It's rich, timestamped, and complete. It's just in a format designed for messaging, not for understanding. Point an agent at it. Let it read everything. Let it do the transform. The whole story was in my inbox the entire time. I just needed something that could read all of it at once.
Daniel Vassallo tweet mediaDaniel Vassallo tweet media
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alex lat
alex lat@alex_ge07·
@gregisenberg Super interesting , how do you find the best data sources for this?
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alex lat
alex lat@alex_ge07·
Day 2 building SpaceBox. You spent 2 hours deleting emails manually. You freed up maybe 200MB. SpaceBox does 4GB in one click. $0.99. Go do something better with your afternoon. spacebox.website
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alex lat
alex lat@alex_ge07·
I'm paying Google $6/month to store my emails. And yeah… most of it is useless emails So I'm building a tool that deletes old useless emails in one click and gets your storage back. spacebox.website
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