u/Amit-saas

My strengths:

- frontend development (MERN stack)

- strong UI/UX + product thinking

- building admin panels and dashboards

- fast execution and shipping

Experience:

- 15+ landing pages, ecommerce builds, and UI themes

- worked with real users, traffic, and feedback

- used AI tools to speed up development, but now also focusing on deeper fundamentals

What I want:

- work with SaaS owners or indie builders

- contribute to real products for gaining experience not for payments.

- learn by solving real problems, not tutorials

If you’re building something and need someone reliable on frontend + product side, I’m open to collaborate.

reddit.com
u/Amit-saas — 10 days ago

What I gained:

- fast execution

- product thinking

- real projects with traffic

- sell upto 5+ web to businesses

What I lacked:

- deep understanding of code and systems

Now I’m fixing that.

Learning fundamentals + system thinking while continuing to build.

Looking to connect with devs who:

- understand systems deeply

- care about clean architecture

- can challenge my approach

I bring execution + real shipping experience.

Open to learn and contribute.

reddit.com
u/Amit-saas — 10 days ago

Last year was weird for me.

I was dealing with bipolar disorder while also spending almost every day building websites with AI tools for content or researching - ChatGPT, grok, Claude.

for code generation as ai builder - Codex, CursorPro, and CopilotPro.

what I built - tracknews.in , shadowmods.in

The crazy part is... I didn’t really know Python or JavaScript properly.

Still, I built working websites. Some got traffic. Some made money. I even sold a few of them.

I only knew full form of MERN stuff like MongoDB, Express, React, and Node.js and npm install then npm run dev. I never properly learned the language behind it. I mostly used AI to write almost all the code for me.

Now I started learning Python from the beginning because I want to actually understand what I’m building and eventually become an AI engineer.

But honestly, this thought keeps hitting me:

Did I actually learn useful skills this past year, or did I just depend too much on AI?

I can build stuff and ship projects, but there are parts of my own projects I still can’t fully explain.

Has anyone else learned like this? Building first and learning the basics later?

I want real opinions, not fake motivation.

reddit.com
u/Amit-saas — 12 days ago

Last year was weird for me.

I was dealing with bipolar disorder while also spending almost every day building websites with AI tools for content or researching - ChatGPT, grok, Claude.

for code generator as ai builder - Codex, CursorPro, and CopilotPro.

what I built - tracknews.in , shadowmods.in

The crazy part is... I didn’t really know Python or JavaScript properly.

Still, I built working websites. Some got traffic. Some made money. I even sold a few of them.

I only knew full form of MERN stuff like MongoDB, Express, React, and Node.js and npm Instal then npm run dev. I never properly learned the languages behind it. I mostly used AI to write almost all the code for me.

Now I started learning Python from the beginning because I want to actually understand what I’m building and eventually become an AI engineer.

But honestly, this thought keeps hitting me:

Did I actually learn useful skills this past year, or did I just depend too much on AI?

I can build stuff and ship projects, but there are parts of my own projects I still can’t fully explain.

Has anyone else learned like this? Building first and learning the basics later?

I want real opinions, not fake motivation.

reddit.com
u/Amit-saas — 12 days ago

Most people sign contracts they barely understand.

Freelance agreements. NDAs. Job offers. Rental contracts.

Usually it goes one of two ways:
- skim through it and sign anyway
- copy clauses into Google and hope the answers are right

Hiring a lawyer for every small contract makes no sense for most people. Especially if the contract itself is worth a few thousand dollars.

That feels like a real gap.

So I started building a tool that takes a contract, explains it in normal language, points out risky clauses, and tells you what might be worth questioning before signing.

Not trying to replace lawyers. More like helping people understand what they’re agreeing to before they blindly sign something.

Using Claude API + Cursor right now. Still early. Spent the last couple weeks testing prompts because half the challenge is getting consistent explanations instead of confident nonsense.

Curious if people here think this solves a real enough problem or if this space is already too crowded.

reddit.com
u/Amit-saas — 13 days ago

Most people sign contracts they barely understand.

Freelance agreements. NDAs. Job offers. Rental contracts.

Usually it goes one of two ways:
- skim through it and sign anyway
- copy clauses into Google and hope the answers are right

Hiring a lawyer for every small contract makes no sense for most people. Especially if the contract itself is worth a few thousand dollars.

That feels like a real gap.

So I started building a tool that takes a contract, explains it in normal language, points out risky clauses, and tells you what might be worth questioning before signing.

Not trying to replace lawyers. More like helping people understand what they’re agreeing to before they blindly sign something.

Using Claude API + Cursor right now. Still early. Spent the last couple weeks testing prompts because half the challenge is getting consistent explanations instead of confident nonsense.

Curious if people here think this solves a real enough problem or if this space is already too crowded.

reddit.com
u/Amit-saas — 13 days ago
▲ 9 r/SaaS

I’m serious when I say this.

I’ve been learning, building small projects, experimenting with AI tools, and trying to understand how real products are built. Now I want to put all my focus into building a SaaS product that people would actually pay for.

The problem is every idea starts looking either oversaturated, fake-hyped, or already dominated by big companies.

I don’t want to build another useless AI wrapper that nobody needs.

I’d rather build something boring but genuinely useful.

For people who’ve actually built SaaS products or work close to startups:

What kinds of problems still need solving?

What type of SaaS would you build today if you had limited money, strong motivation, and were starting from scratch?

Looking for honest ideas and perspectives, not “just work hard bro” advice.
reddit.com
u/Amit-saas — 15 days ago

Some exhausted miner 200 years ago was probably thinking:

“Hopefully future generations won’t have to do this anymore.”

Meanwhile us in 2026:

⛏️ mining for diamonds at 3:47 AM in Minecraft after spending $2,000 on a gaming PC built from mined materials

Humanity really said:

“Damn, mining was hard…”

“Let’s do it again but with shaders.”

We literally turned caves into a recreational activity.

reddit.com
u/Amit-saas — 16 days ago

One thing I keep noticing with AI-assisted coding:

A lot of people can now generate code and ship products much faster than before.

But understanding architecture, maintainability, debugging, database design, scalability, and why certain engineering decisions matter still seems rare.

Sometimes AI-generated code looks clean at first glance while the structure underneath is weak or difficult to maintain long term.

It feels like AI is increasing the value of strong fundamentals rather than removing the need for them.

Curious how experienced developers are seeing this in real teams and production environments.

reddit.com
u/Amit-saas — 16 days ago