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5 contributions to YourRender AI
Collab Opportunity
Hello, We’re looking for a reliable partner (must be based in US, UK, CA, AU, DE, or NZ) to work with our team on a part-time basis. We’re offering a monthly salary of USD 2,000 - 3,000, with flexible working hours and long-term collaboration in mind. No development experience required! Our company, Linkcoders (linkcoders.com) is a software development and outsourcing company that works with international clients across various industries. We focus on building high-quality, scalable software solutions and value clear communication and consistent delivery. This role would involve working closely with our existing team, contributing to ongoing projects, and collaborating remotely. If this sounds interesting to you, I’d be happy to share more details and discuss how we could work together. Looking forward to hearing from you. Best regards, Jamey
0 likes • 3d
Let me tell you a secret that drives the "hustle culture" gurus absolutely crazy... I am lazy. I don't want to pack boxes in my living room. I don't want to deal with angry customers whose dropshipping packages are stuck on a cargo ship in China. And I definitely don't want to spend my weekends answering customer service emails about broken zippers. To me, traditional e-commerce feels like running a stressful restaurant. You’re constantly buying inventory, "cooking" it, serving it, and dealing with complaints. If you like doing that, God bless you. But it’s my personal Hell Island. I prefer the Digital Gumball Machine. Imagine owning a gumball machine. You load the gumball in once. A kid walks by, puts a quarter in, and gets the gumball. But here’s the magic: the gumball never actually leaves the machine. Another kid walks by, puts a quarter in, and gets the exact same gumball. You can sell that same piece of candy 10,000 times without ever restocking. That’s what selling digital printables on Etsy is. Wedding planners, daily journals, inspirational wall art, kids' coloring books... people buy them, download the PDF, and print them at home. Zero inventory. Zero shipping. 100% profit margins. But wait... if it's so easy, why do so many people fail? If you’ve been around the block, you might be thinking, "Hey, I tried Etsy before. I spent days uploading printables and heard absolute crickets. Nobody bought my stuff!" I know. That happened to me at first, too. It's frustrating. Here is why that happens: Most people treat Etsy like playing darts in a dark room. They guess what people want. They spend hours making a cute calendar, put it up, cross their fingers, and hope someone finds it. That is like casting a fishing line into a random mud puddle and hoping to catch a marlin. I hate guessing. Guessing feels like gambling, and I don't like losing money. So, I don't guess. I use a "Fish Finder." This is my actual secret sauce. Before I create anything, I use a piece of software that legally "spies" on Etsy.
Collab Opportunity
Hello, We’re looking for a reliable partner (must be based in US, UK, CA, AU, DE, or NZ) to work with our team on a part-time basis. We’re offering a monthly salary of USD 2,000 - 3,000, with flexible working hours and long-term collaboration in mind. No development experience required! Our company, Linkcoders (linkcoders.com) is a software development and outsourcing company that works with international clients across various industries. We focus on building high-quality, scalable software solutions and value clear communication and consistent delivery. This role would involve working closely with our existing team, contributing to ongoing projects, and collaborating remotely. If this sounds interesting to you, I’d be happy to share more details and discuss how we could work together. Looking forward to hearing from you. Best regards, Jamey
0 likes • 3d
Let me tell you a secret that drives the "hustle culture" gurus absolutely crazy... I am lazy. I don't want to pack boxes in my living room. I don't want to deal with angry customers whose dropshipping packages are stuck on a cargo ship in China. And I definitely don't want to spend my weekends answering customer service emails about broken zippers. To me, traditional e-commerce feels like running a stressful restaurant. You’re constantly buying inventory, "cooking" it, serving it, and dealing with complaints. If you like doing that, God bless you. But it’s my personal Hell Island. I prefer the Digital Gumball Machine. Imagine owning a gumball machine. You load the gumball in once. A kid walks by, puts a quarter in, and gets the gumball. But here’s the magic: the gumball never actually leaves the machine. Another kid walks by, puts a quarter in, and gets the exact same gumball. You can sell that same piece of candy 10,000 times without ever restocking. That’s what selling digital printables on Etsy is. Wedding planners, daily journals, inspirational wall art, kids' coloring books... people buy them, download the PDF, and print them at home. Zero inventory. Zero shipping. 100% profit margins. But wait... if it's so easy, why do so many people fail? If you’ve been around the block, you might be thinking, "Hey, I tried Etsy before. I spent days uploading printables and heard absolute crickets. Nobody bought my stuff!" I know. That happened to me at first, too. It's frustrating. Here is why that happens: Most people treat Etsy like playing darts in a dark room. They guess what people want. They spend hours making a cute calendar, put it up, cross their fingers, and hope someone finds it. That is like casting a fishing line into a random mud puddle and hoping to catch a marlin. I hate guessing. Guessing feels like gambling, and I don't like losing money. So, I don't guess. I use a "Fish Finder." This is my actual secret sauce. Before I create anything, I use a piece of software that legally "spies" on Etsy.
[For-Hire] Ready for work | Senior Full Stack & AI Engineer
Hello. I am a full-stack developer specializing in AI automation, agent development, and model development. I am proficient in voice AI, various LLMs, and TTS development. In particular, I can handle the entire software development process, including Web3 integration, third-party API integration, AWS, and product launches. I possess significant experience in various specialized fields, such as internal API testing using SwaggerUI, web or mobile app version management via GitHub, and DNS. If my expertise aligns with your project, please feel free to contact me at any time. Please send a DM or Telegram: @devstarfive
0 likes • 3d
Let me tell you a secret that drives the "hustle culture" gurus absolutely crazy... I am lazy. I don't want to pack boxes in my living room. I don't want to deal with angry customers whose dropshipping packages are stuck on a cargo ship in China. And I definitely don't want to spend my weekends answering customer service emails about broken zippers. To me, traditional e-commerce feels like running a stressful restaurant. You’re constantly buying inventory, "cooking" it, serving it, and dealing with complaints. If you like doing that, God bless you. But it’s my personal Hell Island. I prefer the Digital Gumball Machine. Imagine owning a gumball machine. You load the gumball in once. A kid walks by, puts a quarter in, and gets the gumball. But here’s the magic: the gumball never actually leaves the machine. Another kid walks by, puts a quarter in, and gets the exact same gumball. You can sell that same piece of candy 10,000 times without ever restocking. That’s what selling digital printables on Etsy is. Wedding planners, daily journals, inspirational wall art, kids' coloring books... people buy them, download the PDF, and print them at home. Zero inventory. Zero shipping. 100% profit margins. But wait... if it's so easy, why do so many people fail? If you’ve been around the block, you might be thinking, "Hey, I tried Etsy before. I spent days uploading printables and heard absolute crickets. Nobody bought my stuff!" I know. That happened to me at first, too. It's frustrating. Here is why that happens: Most people treat Etsy like playing darts in a dark room. They guess what people want. They spend hours making a cute calendar, put it up, cross their fingers, and hope someone finds it. That is like casting a fishing line into a random mud puddle and hoping to catch a marlin. I hate guessing. Guessing feels like gambling, and I don't like losing money. So, I don't guess. I use a "Fish Finder." This is my actual secret sauce. Before I create anything, I use a piece of software that legally "spies" on Etsy.
Dirty little secret of raising capital right now
If you’re a founder looking for cash to scale, your BS detector is probably on high alert. And it should be. Because right now, your current plan to get funding probably feels like choosing between three different types of poison: Option 1: You can spend the next 6 months begging VCs, doing a dog-and-pony show, and giving away 20% of the company you bled to build. Option 2: You can take out a business loan and let the monthly payments wrap around your cash flow like a tapeworm. Option 3: You can pay some "funding guru" a $5,000 upfront, non-refundable deposit just to guess if you qualify for a grant. It’s exhausting. It drains your time, energy, and momentum. I’m an over-analytical guy, and my philosophy is simple: You shouldn't have to go bankrupt, give away your company today, or pay hidden upfront fees just to get the capital you deserve. But... I’m also not a charity case. And neither are the people I work with. Right now, there is a private organization deploying $15,000 to $250,000 in pure grant capital to startups and businesses across 96+ countries. • It is non-refundable (you don't pay it back). • There are zero upfront deposits or processing fees. • They don’t take a single drop of equity today. When you hear that, you should immediately be asking: "Okay, what’s the catch? Why the hell would anyone just hand out free money?" Here is the naked truth: It's entirely selfish. Most big investment firms wait until a company is huge, then they go to the open market and fight tooth-and-nail to buy it for a massive premium. It’s like going to an overpriced supermarket and paying top-dollar for vegetables that have been sprayed with pesticides. This organization prefers to grow their own garden. To them, a $100k grant is crickets. They use these grants as a scouting mechanism. It’s the smartest way to find the most brilliant founders on the planet. They give you the capital. No strings, no loans. You take that money and do what you do best: build and scale. The catch is that they are watching.
0 likes • 3d
Let me tell you a secret that drives the "hustle culture" gurus absolutely crazy... I am lazy. I don't want to pack boxes in my living room. I don't want to deal with angry customers whose dropshipping packages are stuck on a cargo ship in China. And I definitely don't want to spend my weekends answering customer service emails about broken zippers. To me, traditional e-commerce feels like running a stressful restaurant. You’re constantly buying inventory, "cooking" it, serving it, and dealing with complaints. If you like doing that, God bless you. But it’s my personal Hell Island. I prefer the Digital Gumball Machine. Imagine owning a gumball machine. You load the gumball in once. A kid walks by, puts a quarter in, and gets the gumball. But here’s the magic: the gumball never actually leaves the machine. Another kid walks by, puts a quarter in, and gets the exact same gumball. You can sell that same piece of candy 10,000 times without ever restocking. That’s what selling digital printables on Etsy is. Wedding planners, daily journals, inspirational wall art, kids' coloring books... people buy them, download the PDF, and print them at home. Zero inventory. Zero shipping. 100% profit margins. But wait... if it's so easy, why do so many people fail? If you’ve been around the block, you might be thinking, "Hey, I tried Etsy before. I spent days uploading printables and heard absolute crickets. Nobody bought my stuff!" I know. That happened to me at first, too. It's frustrating. Here is why that happens: Most people treat Etsy like playing darts in a dark room. They guess what people want. They spend hours making a cute calendar, put it up, cross their fingers, and hope someone finds it. That is like casting a fishing line into a random mud puddle and hoping to catch a marlin. I hate guessing. Guessing feels like gambling, and I don't like losing money. So, I don't guess. I use a "Fish Finder." This is my actual secret sauce. Before I create anything, I use a piece of software that legally "spies" on Etsy.
🚨 If You Don’t Have a Second Income… It’s Time to Act 🚨
Let’s be honest depending on just one paycheck in 2025 is risky. Costs keep rising, job security is fading, and financial stability requires more than one income stream. 💸 That’s exactly why this course was created to help you build a business that pays 100% commissions directly to you. 💰 People are already joining, setting up, and earning daily while others are still thinking about it. Every day you wait, you’re missing real opportunities. ⏳ 👉 Don’t stay on the sidelines. 👉 Don’t let others get ahead. 👉 Don’t look back wishing you started sooner. This is your chance to secure your future take it now before it’s gone. 🚀
0 likes • 3d
Let me tell you a secret that drives the "hustle culture" gurus absolutely crazy... I am lazy. I don't want to pack boxes in my living room. I don't want to deal with angry customers whose dropshipping packages are stuck on a cargo ship in China. And I definitely don't want to spend my weekends answering customer service emails about broken zippers. To me, traditional e-commerce feels like running a stressful restaurant. You’re constantly buying inventory, "cooking" it, serving it, and dealing with complaints. If you like doing that, God bless you. But it’s my personal Hell Island. I prefer the Digital Gumball Machine. Imagine owning a gumball machine. You load the gumball in once. A kid walks by, puts a quarter in, and gets the gumball. But here’s the magic: the gumball never actually leaves the machine. Another kid walks by, puts a quarter in, and gets the exact same gumball. You can sell that same piece of candy 10,000 times without ever restocking. That’s what selling digital printables on Etsy is. Wedding planners, daily journals, inspirational wall art, kids' coloring books... people buy them, download the PDF, and print them at home. Zero inventory. Zero shipping. 100% profit margins. But wait... if it's so easy, why do so many people fail? If you’ve been around the block, you might be thinking, "Hey, I tried Etsy before. I spent days uploading printables and heard absolute crickets. Nobody bought my stuff!" I know. That happened to me at first, too. It's frustrating. Here is why that happens: Most people treat Etsy like playing darts in a dark room. They guess what people want. They spend hours making a cute calendar, put it up, cross their fingers, and hope someone finds it. That is like casting a fishing line into a random mud puddle and hoping to catch a marlin. I hate guessing. Guessing feels like gambling, and I don't like losing money. So, I don't guess. I use a "Fish Finder." This is my actual secret sauce. Before I create anything, I use a piece of software that legally "spies" on Etsy.
1-5 of 5
Jack Anderson
1
5points to level up
@jack-anderson-8456
Looking for deals

Active 8h ago
Joined May 31, 2026
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