Spent the weekend setting up a VPS that runs a headless Chrome browser 24/7. Its only job: submit job applications on behalf of my users while they sleep. We're past 'automating tasks.' This is automating outcomes.
@gaurangbuilds I can, but why would I? AI doesn't replace the hard part — knowing what to build. It just makes the easy part faster. The bottleneck was never code.
@vaaselene Built my SaaS from my own frustration, not user feedback. Users are great at identifying problems but terrible at suggesting solutions. Watch what they do, not what they say.
@Bradydigital Build for yourself first, then let others in. You already know it works — you use it every day. That's better validation than any feedback form.
The last two days were a trial run of a new internal tool I built for myself called Xscaler.
Based on these metrics i'm now considering launching this as a tool for others? 🤔
@kaialan__@X Shipping imperfect things and figuring it out as you go is the whole game. Most people wait for perfect. The ones who actually build just start.
looking to connect people on @X
if you're into
- building SaaS
- vibe coding
- AI tools
- shipping in public
- figuring it out as you go
say Hi or drop what you're working on looking to follow active ones 👋
@sb_intakall Yes. Don't market the tool — help people with the problem it solves. Post genuinely in niche subreddits. The product comes second to being useful.
@Sathibuilds No distribution. You can build something great but if nobody knows it exists, it doesn't matter. I spent months building before I started showing up where my users already were.
@hnshah Work. The irony of building an agent product is you automate your own job first. If it doesn't solve your own pain, it won't solve anyone else's.
@programmerByDay Recruitment by day, SaaS by night. Built a tool that automates Australian government job applications — the industry I work in. Best decision was building for the problem I see every day instead of chasing trends.
@Pratham_Shnkr24@X AI Agents + SaaS. Just deployed a Browser Use agent on a VPS that reads job listings and auto-fills government applications. The real challenge isn't making it work — it's making sure it doesn't lie on the forms. Guardrails > capabilities.
Hey
@X
I'm looking to #connect with people interested in:
- Frontend
- Backend
- Full stack
- Data Science
- UI/UX
- Freelancing
- Startup
- Saas
- AI Agents
Tell me what are you guys working in this week
@DataRunnerDev Gov job application tool for Australia. Most excited about what I'm calling the master resume — instead of AI generating content from scratch, it takes your full career history and removes what's irrelevant. Subtractive, not generative. Way less hallucination risk.
@hello_code_ Shipped a Browser Use agent that reads job listings and auto-applies for you. My SaaS went from 'tool that helps' to 'does it for you.' The hard part now is stopping the AI from embellishing on the forms.
Just shipped a feature that applies to jobs for you. Reads the listing, matches your profile, fills the application, submits it. All in the browser. All automated. 3 days of work for something nobody will ever see run in person.
@heyalexhey Building from Brisbane. Same thing. My SaaS does $450/mo and I've never been to a single networking event or pitch night. The product doesn't care where you sleep.
the biggest lie in startup culture is that you need to be in San Francisco.
you need customers.
you need a product that works.
you need a team that believes in it.
you can build all of that from anywhere.
i'm doing it from Perth.
@daicandev Posted about the problem I was solving, not the product. First paying user found me through one of those posts. No ads, no launch hype. Just showing up consistently for 9 months.