I am launching SuperDayPrep (AI mock interviews for IB superdays) and while building it, I collected hundreds of real interview questions from Goldman, JPM, Morgan Stanley, etc.
Some were straightforward. Others were absolutely brutal.
The Complete Platform for Investment Banking
From interview prep to career advancement — AI mock interviews, 16+ calculators, 500+ questions, and guides for every stage of your IB journey.
As someone who's seen the tech layoffs rollercoaster up close (friends getting hit left and right this year), I stumbled into "Threshold" this dark-humored simulator where you're a CEO forced to make gut-wrenching layoff calls to keep your startup afloat.
It's addictive, frustrating, and weirdly eye-opening. Played a few rounds and hit a high score of 72% survival rate... but it got me thinking about real-world parallels.
Ten years ago, if a Facebook post didn t receive enough reactions, I would delete it immediately.
Yep, 18-year-old Nika was terrified that people would notice her failure. Reality check: when a post flops, almost nobody sees it anyway. The only person who actually suffers from the low engagement is the original poster.
Face the impossible: fire employees, cut costs, save your startup. A gut-wrenching CEO simulator that tests your leadership under pressure. 3 rounds. Real consequences. No second chances.
CursorRules Directory: the open-source vibe-coding hub for indie hackers, prompt engineers, AI builders & vibe coders.
Instantly find:
Curated AI prompts & MCPs
Remote dev/AI jobs + bounties
Shipping side project ideas
Open-source repos & indie projects
Daily AI news & tools
Now fully open-source on GitHub!
No more 50-tab doom-scrolling. Hand-curated, updated daily, beautifully designed everything the vibe-coding community needs in one place.
Lovable Directory is the all-in-one vibe-coding directory for indie hackers, prompt engineers, AI builders, and no-code creators.
Discover in seconds:
- Curated AI prompts & MCPs (Model Control Prompts)
- Remote dev & AI jobs (full-time + bounty)
- Side project ideas that are actually shipping
- Open-source repos & indie hacker projects
- Daily AI news & tools
Stop doom-scrolling 50 tabs. Everything the vibe-coding community needs hand-curated, updated daily, beautifully designed.
What s that ONE viral recipe (TikTok, IG, YouTube) sitting in your saves that looks unreal but you ve never made because:
zero ingredient amounts
no clue about calories/protein
wait, this for 1 person or 10??
just pure chaos cooking
Drop the link or name it below. I ll grab the wildest ones, run them through EatoAI live, and reply with the actual nutrition facts, scaled ingredients, and shopping list in seconds.
EatoAI instantly turns any YouTube, Instagram, or TikTok recipe video into accurate nutrition facts, macros, full ingredient breakdown, scaled shopping list, and a complete meal plan.
Just paste the link → choose diet mode or full version → set portions & days → get perfect calories, protein, carbs, fats + personalized plan in seconds.
Stop guessing what’s in viral recipes. Know exactly what you’re eating. The fastest recipe video to nutrition & meal planner AI.
AI dev tools are evolving crazy fast , every few weeks there s a new must-try for vibe coders.
Some people are building full products with @ChatGPT by OpenAI and @Replit , others swear by @Cursor and @Claude by Anthropic , and a few are mixing @Lovable + @v0 by Vercel + @bolt.new to ship apps in record time.
I ve been refining my own vibe stack lately, trying to find that sweet spot between speed, control, and creativity. It made me wonder ,what does your setup look like right now?
I'm diving into the world of bootstrapping and want to build something amazing without spending a dime. I know many of you have been there starting from scratch, hustling with free tools, and leveraging creativity to grow.
Let s share our best tips, hacks, and stories! What free tools, platforms, or strategies have you used to launch or scale a project on a $0 budget? From no-cost marketing tactics to open-source software or scrappy growth hacks, spill the beans!
1. Effort results I ve spent hours on posts that got 0 attention. I wrote my most viral post in 10 minutes while having morning coffee. You never know what will take off. Don't overthink it, just start writing and posting. 2. Don't be afraid to help competitors Some people say building in public I only give my competitors an advantage. That's is partly true. At least 2 people reached out and said they built a similar product after my posts. But first, this is great - the more the merrier, and the market is big enough for everybody. Second, your real edge is not the tech you are using. It's the attention to the product you can generate. And social media is the only way to achieve it if you don't have millions for marketing. 3. Reddit hate is brutal If your post has even a faint smell of promotion - people will hate you on Reddit. And when they do, they hate firecely. Expect a lot of angry DMs and downvotes. 4. Share your REAL struggles The only way to avoid this and still get views, is being real. Share scary and cringy stuff. If you feel like you re gonna burn from shame after posting - it means you are posting the right thing. 5. Post on the right subs Not all Reddit subs are equal. Most ban promotion posts. I always post on r/SideProject or r/SaaS. They are friendly to builders and your story will more likely resonate there. 6. Adjacent audiences rock Some say builder subs are useless, because only your competitors hang out there. This is not true. After my viral post on r/SaaS, I got a lot of leads for Yadaphone. Turned out many people on r/Saas and r/SideProject are freelancers, business owners and digital nomads. They all needed a cheap overseas call solution and I got a ton of new paying customers. 7. Not posting a link works Avoid including a link to your product in Reddit posts. First, it s the quickest way to get banned for promotion. Second, if people like your product, they will google it, and it s a huge boost for SEO. Just share the name of the product in the post or wait until somebody asks for the link in the comments (somebody always does). 8. Non-native English is an advantage This is a bonus for all non-native speakers out there. I used to push all my texts through ChatGPT to fix style and mistakes. And it only got me downvoted because people thought my texts were AI-generated. Now I just write and post stuff as is. Making mistakes shows you are human, and Reddit values that over your perfect English P.S. avoid the em dash at all costs, this is a clear sign you used AI (even if you didn t). If your are curious about my viral post in r/SaaS, you can read it here. By the way, please upvote if you like it! https://www.reddit.com/r/SaaS/co...
Launching this week? Want even more coverage? Drop your best pitch in the replies for a chance to be covered in the Leaderboard newsletter which goes out to ~500K people
BetaBoard is a free launch platform where anyone can list their product, beta, or offer and get it shared with 1M+ early adopters via our newsletter. No startup required—just submit and get seen. Perfect for SaaS, tools, MVPs, or side projects.