Apoorva
@apoojainsolanki
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Founder @tinycommand I think about systems, behavior, and why people do what they do. Building tools that remove work, not add it.
Joined May 2023
I’ve started using “show probable spam” as a “load more thoughtful replies” button. Not sure that’s the intended UX, but here we are.
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Honest question for founders here: Do you still get existential doubts about your product even after people start paying for it?
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Counterpoint: fully hetero women might actually be the most resilient species. Choosing to love men daily, voluntarily, with full awareness? That’s endurance training.
One thing I know for sure about highly intelligent women is that they are always gay or at-least bisexual. Women cannot be highly intelligent and fully hetero. That does not exist. There must be some dumb in you for you to "truly" like men. 🤣
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Lesson I learnt today: Good marketing doesn’t convince people. It makes them feel understood faster than they can explain the problem themselves. That moment is the conversion.
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Olive Garden trending reminded me: Unlimited breadsticks is just a growth strategy with carbs. Give people abundance and watch behavior change. #OliveGarden
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If the #doordashfairy can restore my faith in humanity, imagine what proper UX could do.
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Watching the Knicks and thinking about how much performance is confidence wearing a jersey. Same players, same bodies. Different belief. Suddenly, everything clicks. Expectations matter more than people admit. #Knicks #NBACup2025 #NBACupChampionship
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Trying to quit cigarettes? Nicotine gum. Alcohol? Rehab. Sugar? Stevia, I guess? What’s the prescription for scrolling? Eye drops? Holy water? A cease-and-desist from my own brain? Doctors, I’m in your hands. Fix me.
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I realised something sitting in Monday traffic. Most of my stress comes from things that aren’t actually urgent. They’re just loud. Turns out silence is a better manager than notifications. 🥲
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Her story reminds me that brilliance is often quiet, sometimes overlooked, but never small. The right idea does not ask for permission. It just waits for the world to catch up. #OneFactOneLesson #WomenInSTEM #HedyLamarr
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4) The U.S. Navy ignored her patent for decades; it became foundational only later for Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and GPS. 5) She built inventions between film takes in her trailer, scribbling designs on engineering paper while the world saw only her beauty.
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2) At 19, she escaped an abusive marriage to an arms dealer by disguising herself as a maid and fleeing across Europe. 3) She co-invented frequency-hopping with composer George Antheil in 1942, a secure communication method for WWII torpedoes.
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5 lesser-known facts about Hedy Lamarr, the Hollywood star whose inventions shaped how the modern world connects. 1) She grew up in Vienna studying machines with her father, long before she stepped into Hollywood.
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What stays with me is how she saw possibility where others saw machinery. Creativity and logic were never opposites for her. They were the same language spoken in different tones. #OneFactOneLesson #WomenInSTEM #adalovelace
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4. She predicted that machines could one day compose music and create art, long before anyone else imagined symbolic computation. 5. She struggled with chronic illness most of her life. She wrote mathematical letters that showed an imagination far beyond her era while bedridden.
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2. As a teenager she wrote detailed notes on flight, complete with sketches of wings and propulsion ideas. 3. Her work with Charles Babbage was not simple annotation. Her notes were longer than his original paper and included the first published computer algorithm.
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5 interesting facts about Ada Lovelace, the woman who imagined the future of computing before computers even existed. 1. She was the daughter of Lord Byron, but raised almost entirely away from him. Her mother insisted she study math and logic.
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My friend has launched an app, and he needs an VOTE from us It will be very good if you can do it and let me know in comments - will take 30 seconds Your upvote would mean a lot 🙏 🔗
producthunt.com
TinyCommand brings your forms, workflows, data, emails, and AI agents together, so everything connects and runs on its own. Build smarter, automate faster, and manage it all in one no-code platform.
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She died of breast cancer at 50, just as the scientific world was beginning to understand the scale of her insight. What stays with me is how sometimes the discoveries that shift entire fields begin with someone who simply pays attention to what everyone else overlooks.
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4. Her discovery confirmed that sex was determined by specific chromosomes, not environment or nutrition. This became a foundation of modern genetics. 5. She published 38 papers, received awards, and led her research largely without the academic status men around her enjoyed.
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