Hey,
I've been working on a new idea for a tool called CodeMentorGPT, and
I would really appreciate your valuable feedback on its potential and any possible improvements. Before I dive into the details, here's a quick overview of what it is:
an AI solution for busy programmers that would love to learn new programming languages, but have no time for it.
A tool that
- show you the key concepts in just 5 bullet points
- removes all the friction to learn a new thing
- Put focus on practice
Designed for busy programmers with family.
Key features include
- it's based on Pareto's 80/20 Law
the AI will show you the key concepts in just 5 bullet points.
So you can accelerate your learning and gain a competitive edge over other programmers.
- Frictionless
the AI removes all the friction to learn a new thing, allowing you to deepen your understanding with just one click.
- Focus on practice
you can see code examples and exercises that are specifically chosen by AI to reinforce your learning for a particular thing to learn.
The Problem
As a full-time developer, dad, and husband, I understand how challenging it is to find time to learn new programming languages.
I'm a backend developer (working with C#), and I always wanted to learn front-end cool languages too, but I didn't want to sacrifice my family time.
When you have little free time, starting to study a new technology seems like an overwhelming obstacle.
The Solution
The power of AI could help us learn faster and better, without compromising our work-life balance.
- You get the essential concepts of any programming language distilled in 5 bullet points, in seconds, without fluff or distractions.
- You click on a bullet point and get other 5 related short bullet points concepts on that thing.
- For each of them, you can even get real code examples and exercises, handpicked by the AI algorithm.
And go on.
In a few frictionless clicks/iterations, you start getting confidence with key concepts of a new technology.
Check it out here
https://yep.so/p/codementorgpt?r...
Any thoughts or feedback?
Thanks!