What I learned building a solo product
I shipped WhatShipped in about a week. Not because I'm exceptionally fast. Because I've spent years making the mistake of optimizing for building instead of for shipping — and I finally stopped. Th...

Source: DEV Community
I shipped WhatShipped in about a week. Not because I'm exceptionally fast. Because I've spent years making the mistake of optimizing for building instead of for shipping — and I finally stopped. This is what actually changed. The old pattern The cycle I used to run: Have an idea Build the full version in my head Start building Keep building until it felt "ready" Launch Silence Lose motivation, move on The problem wasn't the execution. It was the framing. I was treating "done" as a quality threshold I set internally. By the time I shipped, I'd answered every question except the one that mattered: do people actually want this? WhatShipped started from a real frustration I'd been building Geentoo — an Italian platform for co-founders — for months. Great commit history? No. It was full of fix, wip, ok this works, ok this actually works. When I wanted to communicate what had changed to users, I had nothing coherent to show. I wanted a tool that could look at a messy git history and generate