Ask HN: Review my startups interns startup - BinaryCake [free credits]
We've got a great guy working with my startup (Broadersheet) this summer.
He's just launched his first startup - BinaryCake: Development Screencasts - an awesome achievement for a 15 year old.
If you register at binarycake.com and redeem the coupon "hackernews" you'll get ten credits - more than enough for a video of your choice.
The videos are really great quality, they cover topics like Test Driven Development, iPhone Development and PHP.
Check it out, give great feedback here and I'll send it to him. Thanks!!
21 comments
[ 13.9 ms ] story [ 1388 ms ] threadCoupon not working for me either. "no longer valid"
The navigation is easy to use (you can tell he focused on usability), the videos seem top notch (nice background music in the previews), and its useful to me as a developer.
One thing, and its probably nitpicky, is the color. The green and white on black is standard hackerish theme, but I can't do it for very long without it starting to bother my eyes. He might have better results w/better colors.
But yeah, very cool.
You can also head over to the about page ( http://binarycake.com/about ) and see a list of credit bundles you can buy and the costs.
Thanks for the feedback! Jamie
That said, they're a firmly consumer-unfriendly model, for those very reasons. And even then, the "more likely to spend credits" factoid only comes into play once they've actually bought into the system - seeing that it's Yet Another Credit System can be a slight added barrier to entry.
Expanding on this, if every place I spend money online worked with its own "credit" system, I would have upwards of 20 idle balances of my own money earning interest for someone else. Not a very palatable future.
So you do screencasts? What type of screencasts? If that isn't inherently obvious at the start then a potential customer may feel left in the dark. The only place I can be for sure that these are developer screencasts is the tiny "kickass developer screencasts" text under the logo.
Be obvious with what you do! Peepcode (http://peepcode.com/) is an excellent model for a screencast site. By having "Rails" and "rSpec" in big letters to the right of their logo, I know instantly what they sell.
I'm no designer, but that's what strikes me at first glance. What an excellent achievement for a fellow teenager though!
(One final tip, make your <title></title> have the words "developer screencasts" in it. It will help make sure people know what you are giving them.)
diiq's story:
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Will there be 250 credits worth of content soon? 5-10 credits a video (maybe), 2-3 videos per month (maybe), that's... nearly two years, if the videos are cheap?
Trying buying credits. Why can I only by credits in these numbers -- why not any number? Some of the screencasts cost 8 credits. I don't want to pay 10 dollars for what you say is only worth 8.
Ohhh! I'm supposed to go somewhere else to redeem the coupon... hunting for the right button.
Found it. Aaand the coupon doesn't work. Hmmm.
So I guess I'll download a preview. Maybe it'll be worth $10 to see more. I'm pretty good with PHP, and I've done TDD, so I'll grab the iPhone development masterclass --- I don't know anything about iPhone development. Maybe I'll learn something. Downloading... wondering why this isn't embedded...
Watching a splash screen and music...
Hmm. Something about a method that gets the number of lines. Whoops! Preview is over.
I should get back to debugging.
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It's not a story with very happy ending, I'm afraid.