I built ten products in three years.

A Mac app that runs AI locally on your machine, no cloud, no data leaving your computer. An AI voice studio. A developer assessment platform. A web portal for creators. An agentic system that connects AI tools in ways nobody had tried before.

I built them with my two sons from our apartment in Prague. We used AI tools that didn't exist two years ago. We designed, coded, shipped — things that would have taken a team of fifteen and a year of runway, we did in weeks.

I have never been more capable of building in my life.

And nobody came.

I posted on X. Forty views. I shared on LinkedIn. Two hundred impressions — then the algorithm buried it because I included a link. I tried ProductHunt. My launch disappeared in three hours. I tried Reddit. Removed for self-promotion. I spent fifty dollars on Google Ads. Two hundred clicks. Zero signups. Zero feedback. Not even a single person telling me it was bad.

Silence.

I know you know this feeling. Maybe you are sitting with it right now.

You discovered that AI let you build things you had been dreaming about for years. Maybe you are a designer who finally shipped a full application. Maybe you are a teacher who built a tool for your students. Maybe you are a developer who stepped outside your job for the first time and made something entirely your own.

You felt the magic of it. The pure, ridiculous magic of describing what you want and watching it take shape. You stayed up late. You iterated. You shipped. You felt proud of something in a way you hadn't felt in years.

Then you tried to show it to the world.

And the world didn't show up.

Not because your product is bad. You don't even know if it's bad — nobody tried it long enough to tell you. Not because the market doesn't need it. You can't test market fit when you can't get a single person through the door.

You are not bad at marketing. You are not bad at building. You are caught in a system that was designed before you existed.

Social media platforms suppress your links because they want people to stay. Their algorithms reward personalities, not products. App stores bury you under two million listings. ProductHunt became a leaderboard for people who already have audiences. Review sites are graveyards of abandoned projects. Google Ads need thousands of dollars and months of optimization before they tell you anything useful.

The entire infrastructure of product discovery was built for a different era. For big teams with marketing departments. For startups with venture funding and PR agencies. For people who made fewer things, slower, with more money behind each one.

That era ended.

This year, millions of people will build products for the first time. Every one of them will face the same wall you faced. Build something extraordinary in weeks, then spend months screaming into a void.

Maybe there is a brilliant product sitting on someone's laptop right now. A tool that would change how nurses manage patient records. A little app that would save teachers three hours a week. A new way to organize knowledge that nobody has thought of because nobody with that particular life experience has ever been able to build software before.

We will never know. Because nobody came.

I don't want to accept that.

I am building something for us. A place where builders show their work to other builders. Where you get honest, structured feedback from people who understand what it takes to ship — because they are shipping too. Where the best products rise not because someone paid for ads or had a hundred thousand followers, but because other builders tested them and said: this is good, people need to see this.

It costs thirty dollars a month. A dollar a day to show you mean it. When you pay, your product is alive on the platform. When you stop, it fades. No graveyard. No ghost town. Every product you see has a builder behind it who cares right now, this month, today.

You review three products a month. Structured, thoughtful, honest — the kind of feedback you wish someone would give you. In return, you get the same. Not “looks great!” Not a thumbs up from a stranger. Real answers to real questions. Would you use this? Would you pay? What is confusing? What is missing?

Every week, the ten best-reviewed products get featured and shared with a growing audience beyond the builder community. That is the distribution. Not your forty followers. Not an algorithm deciding whether your link deserves to be seen. A community of builders saying “this deserves attention” — and then making sure it gets it.

I am calling it Builder & Co.

The “& Co.” is the point. You are the builder. We are the company — in the oldest sense of that word. Companions. Fellow travelers. People who understand what you made and why it matters, because they are making things too.

If you are sitting with a product that nobody has seen. If you are tired of posting into silence. If you believe that what you built deserves at least one honest conversation with someone who understands.

This is for you.

— Rado

Prague, 2026

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