A platform that allows multiple freelancers to immediately join a project without pitching. Main value propositions: - Freelancers get work immediately - Clients post a job of any size today and get it done today
Guaranteed work for freelance designers.
A platform that allows multiple freelancers to immediately join a project without pitching. Main value propositions: - Freelancers get work immediately - Clients post a job of any size today and get it done today
You’re not sure how to create consistent income as a freelancer. You’re on Upwork and Fiverr and Freelancer to find work, yet you still struggle. You’re qualified to do the work, but your proposals get buried beneath 10s or 100s of others. I would apply to job after job, and despite being qualified to do the work, I was buried by the other 25+ people applying to the same position. With all these freelancers confident in their ability to do the work, why not let them join projects immediately? Th
I think this is a very half baked idea. How will you or or the project owner, figure out who is a legitimately good coder and who is not, if anyone can contribute ? More importantly, why do the people who contributed unrelated or badly written code get compensated as your app's mission seems to indicate? This is sounding more like "Prize for participation" concept of today's schools' sporting events. If you are not getting hired on those platforms you mentioned, there is a reason: There are peop
Bringing stability to free-lancing, much needed. All the best!
Finally the release of Bedrock. Its still early but I am really looking forward to seeing the platform succeed. Best wishes, Isaiah and let's talk sometime as I have some ideas around getting traction.
A measure of community engagement at launch. Higher means more people noticed and interacted with the product. It's a traction signal, not a quality rating.
Discussion threads divided by interest score. Above 0.30 is strong. Below 0.15 suggests the product got clicks but not conversation.
Categories come from the product's launch tags. Most products appear in 2-3 categories. The primary category is listed first.
The scores reflect launch-period engagement. Historical data is preserved and doesn't change retroactively. The build date at the bottom shows when the index was last refreshed.