A user shared their experience of building a weather app and noted that it felt lifeless. They suggest adding interactive features that make the app more engaging for users.
I used to live in spreadsheets, forecasts, budgets, and boardroom logic. Then I started building a weather app. Not because the world needed another weather app. Because I couldn’t stop thinking, “why does something I check every day feel so lifeless?” So I started building nights, weekends, early mornings, whenever I could. No big team. No magical funding. Just me, a lot of stubbornness, and an unhealthy number of tiny product decisions that most people will never notice. What I’ve learned: 1. Users do not care how hard something was to build. They care how it feels. 2. “Small” details are usually the product. 3. Building something people actually use is equal parts ego death and therapy. 4. The market will humble your genius and reward your consistency. 5. Sometimes the only thing separating an idea from a real business is surviving enough boring days in a row. The emotional part nobody talks about: when you build your own thing, it starts to mirror you back to yourself. Your patience. Your insecurity. Your taste. Your delusion. Your resilience. I thought I was building an app. Really, I was building proof that I could turn an idea in my head into something real. That has meant more to me than any title ever has. What’s something entrepreneurship taught you about yourself that had nothing to do with money?