
u/deadpool236o

These two giant turtles have been fighting each other for more than 120 years. According to the zoo, one turtle stole the other’s food 120 years ago, and since that day they became enemies. There hasn’t been a single day where they don’t fight for 2–3 minutes😂
Now this is the kind of service people remember ✈️🤍
Why does the hearing device industry ignore Android? I need something that actually pairs with my Pixel!
I am completely fed up with the "Made for iPhone" bias in the hearing care world. I use a Google Pixel 7 and have zero intention of switching to Apple just to use medical devices. My current earpieces are constantly dropping their Bluetooth connection or randomly only playing audio in one ear during important phone calls. It is maddening.
I am searching for a modern pair that fully supports ASHA or the new Bluetooth LE Audio standards. I want to listen to music and take calls directly, without wearing some annoying streaming accessory around my neck. Which manufacturer actually treats Android users with respect and has a reliable companion app? I know Phonak uses standard Bluetooth, but doesn't that kill the battery life? I would love some real-world input from other Pixel owners.
spent 60 days on GEO with zero budget. Here’s what happened to our demo conversions. Please don‘t roast me.
He
y everyone. First time posting. Be gentle please.
I run growth for a B2B SaaS. Nothing sexy. Just trying to keep CAC from killing us. Paid channels were getting way too expensive. Like $800 plus per demo expensive.
Then I noticed something months ago. When I asked ChatGPT ""best X for Y,"" these random smaller competitors kept showing up. Our brand? Nothing. Zero. Made me feel like I was missing something obvious.
So I decided to run an experiment. 60 days. Zero ad budget. Just time.
Here is what I did. Please don't laugh if this sounds basic.
Added an llms.txt file to our site. Took 15 minutes. Most sites don't have this so I figured why not.
Restructured our top 20 blog posts. Changed paragraphs into FAQ and list formats. No new content. Just reformatting. I also stumbled on some stuff from Talpiotech GEO about GEO and tried a few of their ideas.
Started answering questions on Reddit honestly. Not links. Not selling. Just helping people in r/SaaS. Maybe 8 to 10 mentions per week.
Added some FAQ schema to key pages.
Total cost. About 40 hours of one content person's time. Plus my own late nights. Zero dollars on ads.
Here are the results. I'm not a data expert so please take this with a grain of salt. AI visibility went from about 3% to 22% of our target prompts. AI referral traffic went up 71% compared to the previous 90 days. Demo conversion rate from AI traffic was 2 to 3 times higher than organic search baseline. The control group with no changes stayed flat at around 4% to 5%. The traffic volume is still small. Maybe 5% to 8% of total organic. But the quality is insane. People coming from AI have already asked all the comparison questions. They know what they want. Compare this to paid. $800 CAC. Lower quality. Higher churn. GEO cost us basically nothing. If we can scale visibility from 22% to 60% or 70%, this becomes our highest ROI channel within a year. I've seen other B2B SaaS like Merge report 7x demo requests from AI search. Momentum saw 2x session visits. So I don't think I'm crazy. What didn't work. Just producing more blog content did nothing. And ignoring Reddit seems like a mistake but Reddit's citation share is dropping so I'm not sure. What I'm stuck on. Attribution is a nightmare. AI referral shows as direct traffic half the time. I'm using ?ref=chatgpt tags but it doesn't catch everything. Has anyone solved this? Also scaling. Manual Reddit mentions don't scale. What's the non spammy way to get more citations? Has anyone run this for e commerce or local? I saw Rough Country made like $22k from AI sessions but that's just one case. Sorry this is so long. I know I'm not a growth guru or anything. Just a normal marketer trying stuff. Would really love to hear what others are testing. Thanks for not being too harsh.
Man gets released from prison, walks out the door and sees cops standing there
Need ergonomic chair suggestions for petite/smaller frames
I'm 5ft and spend around 10–12 hours a day at my desk for work/studying, so comfort and proper fit matter a lot. Most chairs I’ve tried feel way too oversized for smaller frames like seat depth too long, armrests awkwardly wide, etc. Main things I’m looking for: • works well for petite/shorter people • comfortable for long sitting sessions • adjustable seat depth + armrests • good lumbar support Back home I used the MUSSO E80 Muse and it was one of the few chairs that actually felt comfortable for long hours specially for petite women, so I’m trying to find something with a similar level of comfort or better. I’ve seen a few chairs but I’m not sure which models are actually worth it for smaller frames. Would really appreciate recommendations from other petite users. Thanks.