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Prashant Lakhlani
A good starter kit Vs No-Code
For non-techy founders, it is obvious that no-code is their choice, but how do you decide between so many no-code platforms out there? For technical founders, a good starter kit (most of them are open-source, free, and loaded with lots of defaults) can give you a huge leap to start working on your core features and complete them within a month or two. I'm interested to know if as a technical person, you prefer no-code vs starter kit these days? I'm a technical founder and building a starter kit. Because: ➡️ Me & My team starts 2-3 projects every quarter for Startup and small businesses and want to avoid implementing same features again and again ➡️ I want more startups to use .NET instead of another back-end stack. So, I'm launching my starter kit with fully loaded features at a very small price! ➡️ I want to help more founders with their development, and the starter kit will allow me to finish 15-25 projects a year instead of 6-8! Love to know more about your thoughts!
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