Max

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Max

@MaxRohowsky

Finance Ph.D. & Engineer writing about my learnings on: business, indie hacking, and design. Portfolio: https://t.co/8syXVpCMLM

Berlin, Deutschland เข้าร่วม Mayıs 2023
254 กำลังติดตาม973 ผู้ติดตาม
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Max
Max@MaxRohowsky·
Hello X, it's time to build in public again! Lately I’ve been building Postfern, a tool to help: • Post more consistently across socials • Create better written content It's a work in progress, and I'll be building it in public to test the waters.
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Max
Max@MaxRohowsky·
Check the availability of >300 domains in 5 min. 1. Make names with Claude & ChatGPT 2. Generate .py script using the whois package 3. Run the script and create a shortlist. Repeat 3-4 times to cover large surface area of options.
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Max
Max@MaxRohowsky·
I want the hero section to capture the 'aha' moment. After a lot of thought, I've sketched out how I want it to look. Used claude and some figma magic to stich it together. It's still a rough sketch especially the left side, but at least I know what direction to go in.
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Max
Max@MaxRohowsky·
Am I the only one that has this issue with Cursor? It just disappears randomly.
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Max
Max@MaxRohowsky·
This is interesting to think about. The headline is weak i think. When i land on a site i want to know what value i get and how. Value: Finish more books How (this is missing): Streaks and Progress tracking So, I'd lean towards: Finish more books using simple daily goals, streaks, and progress tracking Subheadline needs tobe shorter + reinforce headline, e.g. - Build streaks to stay consistent - Track your goals and daily progress In general I think it's more of a vitamin (nice to have) than a pain killer, which is always a bit challenging. Hope the feedback helps :)
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Lucas
Lucas@ByBewer·
@MaxRohowsky Made it a little more visible now. Not quite there yet, but it's a start 🫡
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Lucas
Lucas@ByBewer·
Why everyone should read more books 👇
Anish Moonka@AnishA_Moonka

Part 2. Yale tracked 3,635 people over the age of 50 for 12 years. People who read books for more than 3.5 hours a week lived 23 months longer than people who didn’t read at all. A 20% drop in mortality risk. From sitting on a couch with a book. They controlled for age, sex, race, education, wealth, health status, and depression. The gap held across every single one. It only worked for books, though. Newspapers and magazines barely moved the needle. The researchers traced it to something specific: books force your brain to hold characters, plotlines, and ideas in memory at the same time and connect them across hours or days. That kind of sustained mental effort builds cognitive reserves that magazines and news articles simply don’t demand. A University of Sussex study found that just 6 minutes of reading cut stress levels by 68%. That beat listening to music (61%), drinking tea (54%), and going for a walk (42%). The cognitive neuropsychologist who ran it, David Lewis, said it works because reading locks the mind onto a single narrative, which slows heart rate and eases muscle tension. Your brain can’t spiral about your inbox when it’s tracking a plot. A 2013 study published in Science tested whether reading literary fiction improves your ability to read other people’s emotions. Five experiments. All showed the same thing: people who read literary fiction scored higher on emotion-recognition tests than people who read nonfiction, genre fiction, or nothing at all. The theory is that literary fiction presents complex, unpredictable characters who train your brain to decode real human behavior. Fair caveat: later replication attempts got mixed results, so the single-session effect is still debated. But the broader correlation between fiction reading and social cognition has held up across multiple independent studies. Reading on physical paper may matter more than you’d expect, too. Six out of seven meta-analyses have found that people comprehend text better on paper than on screens. Researchers call it the “screen inferiority effect.” Scrolling fragments attention and strips away physical cues (page thickness, text position) your brain uses to build a mental map of the material. A Norwegian eye-tracking study caught something unsettling: students reading on screens processed text more shallowly than paper readers. They didn’t even realize they were doing it. Part 1 covered the brain rewiring. This is the rest of the picture. Books cut stress faster than a walk. They may add nearly two years to your life. They sharpen your ability to read the room. And paper beats screens in 6 out of 7 studies for actually understanding what you read. Six minutes a day is where it starts.

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Pierre-Eliott Lallemant
Pierre-Eliott Lallemant@pierreeliottlal·
Cold email results from the last 3 months for gojiberry.ai : 344,600 emails sent 4273 replies 2597 people accepted to receive a blueprint 200+ new customers $20k+ in new MRR Total cost: $500 per month (infrastructure) That’s ~$7.5 CAC per customer
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Max
Max@MaxRohowsky·
@BhushanDevansh Thank god you changed the growfol logo - that infinity thing always had a bitter aftertaste 😄 💪
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Devansh 🪽
Devansh 🪽@BhushanDevansh·
Brain fog is a common issue when trying to find ideas to write on LinkedIn. People start finding trending discussions over the internet on different platforms. They're still manually hunting for trending topics while others are already creating content around them. By the time you spot a trend, it's already too late. The viral moment has passed. Your competitors have already captured the attention. To solve this, we've now launched 𝗹𝗶𝘃𝗲 𝘀𝗲𝗮𝗿𝗰𝗵 on Growfol 🎉 You get instant access to what's exploding right now. While others are still scrolling through feeds looking for inspiration, you're already publishing content that hits different. The difference between viral and ignored is often just timing. Try out the new feature now, I promise it's goood :D
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Max
Max@MaxRohowsky·
The best thing about building a marketing tool? It helps me with marketing. Which is the only thing I dislike about Bootstrapping.
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Max
Max@MaxRohowsky·
@zeeshana07x Hey zeeshan, they recently switched to usage based pricing so it’s a bit better than it was previously 😁
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Zeeshan
Zeeshan@zeeshana07x·
@MaxRohowsky do you use X API for posting on X I heard their api is super expensive not worth building on
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Max
Max@MaxRohowsky·
Cross publishing posts never looked this good before. 🧑‍🍳 Good progress, but still quite a few bugs to fix. Working with the different API providers (especially Threads) is a nightmare.
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Max@MaxRohowsky·
AI replies. The fastest way to loose all credibility.
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Max
Max@MaxRohowsky·
@subham_agrawal_ Hey ChatGPT, give me the ingredients for an apple pie.
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Subham Agrawal
Subham Agrawal@subham_agrawal_·
@MaxRohowsky exactly, threads api is the wild west. what if you focus on the platforms that play nice first?
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Max
Max@MaxRohowsky·
Today's build in public progress: - Started working on mobile compatibility. - Secured the .com for crosspublish - Queueing and scheduling logic bug fixes. My biggest concern is scope creep. Instead of adding new stuff, the stuff I made just needs to work.
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Max
Max@MaxRohowsky·
Which design is cleaner? Top or Bottom?
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Pierre-Eliott Lallemant
Pierre-Eliott Lallemant@pierreeliottlal·
I built 2 SaaS companies from $0 to $10K+ MRR in weeks. Not months. Weeks. Here's the blueprint 👇 Most founders think you need YC or VC money to hit $10K. I'm proof you don't. My first SaaS companies? Complete disasters. I spent 6 months building in silence. Zero customer conversations. Built features nobody wanted. Kept adding "just one more thing" before launching. Classic mistakes. Then I flipped the script: Sell first. Build second. I wouldn't write a single line of code until 5-10 people said they'd pay. That's how I hit $500K ARR in 8 months with CoCo AI, my last company. That's how GojiberryAI launched. The framework: > Pick 1 idea > Create 1 offer > Pitch to 100+ potential customers > Build only after validation > Test every acquisition channel > Double down on what works My co-founder @romanbuildsaas and I repeated this system multiple times. We tested EVERYTHING. Most channels failed. Some didn't. We documented every channel that worked in a 46-page blueprint. It took us months to build. Inside, you'll see exactly how we: ✅ Validate before building anything ✅ Get paid pre-launch ✅ Price to win ✅ Find customer #1 → scale to 100 ✅ Run SEO & free tool plays that actually convert ✅ Grow on Reddit without getting banned ✅ Automate outbound (cold email + LinkedIn) with high-intent leads ✅ Turn support into your best sales channel We could charge $2K for this. But we're giving it away. To get it: 1️⃣ Comment "10K" 2️⃣ I'll send it directly PS : our next blueprint will be how to reach $1M ARR.
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Max
Max@MaxRohowsky·
@BhushanDevansh Good to be back on twitter and good to see you still shipping 🚀😎
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Devansh 🪽
Devansh 🪽@BhushanDevansh·
I gave my claude code a phone number 📞 made this fun remote control for my cc which I can phone call anytime i'm away from my machine...using codex in around 2 hours. > call to a dedicated Claude contact no. > tell it the repo name and changes to make > works in a single cc session with full context. so, whenever you don't feel like typing, you betterCallClaude 😝
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Max
Max@MaxRohowsky·
@naval But most won’t put in the effort it takes to make something worth using. There are millions of podcasts, and I can only name 3-4.
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Naval
Naval@naval·
Coding an app is the new starting a podcast.
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