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SaaS Life

92 members • Free

3 contributions to SaaS Life
How i struggle with exporting DeepSeek to pdf and make my own solution
I hated how my DeepSeek chats turned into a mess when saving them. Other tools ruined the formatting or sent my data to their servers. So I built my own solution: the DeepSeek to PDF Exporter. It works entirely on your device—your data never leaves your computer. It keeps your code blocks clean, your text selectable, and your privacy intact. Technical Advantages: - Generates PDFs client-side using a custom engine (no external APIs) - Preserves text selection and proper page wrapping (try highlighting text in the PDF!) - Handles code blocks and markdown perfectly - Zero data collection - your chats stay yours It’s free to use. If you find any bugs, let me know so I can fix them
How i struggle with exporting DeepSeek to pdf and make my own solution
0 likes • 24d
@Svyat Tar Finally got a chance to try out the extension. At first I got an error but refreshing the page fixed that. Seems to be working great! Thanks
0 likes • 24d
@Svyat Tar I have alot of tabs in the background. It probably happened because the page needed to reload for proper parsing. I found another tab I haven't touched in a few days and it says could not establish connection. Receiving end does not exist.
How do you conduct market research?
I don't have enough appendages to count the amount of times that Ive *thought* I've done my due diligence in market research only to get started on development, need to look something up, and find a solution that does the exact thing I'm trying to accomplish / void I'm trying to fill. This usually leaves me in an extremely disheartened slump that takes a while to get out of. So my question is this: Is it worth subbing out the task of market research? Despite all I've learned from previous experiences, my research checklist never seems verbose enough to cover all of the angles that I don't consider. After all, I can't know what I don't know.
2 likes • Aug 26
@Connor Jones I agree and have first hand experience with this. I'm an automotive electrician tech and there are 2 major diagram service providers that the industry knows. I tried both but hated one for their navigation system and others love it. A lot of shops also subscribe to both and more providing the same info with their own twist. Just because there is competition doesn't mean every user will like the biggest one. Nothing wrong with healthy competition and it's actually encouraged to go after a market that has competition.
Building software because YOU need it?
How many of us (I'm obviously in) have built software because we needed it for ourselves? Example: automating scheduled invoicing from contracts, a commenting system, and a form generator. And then...find out that it only solves MY problem. I can count around a dozen times and got a dozen useless domain names to show for it 😲 Then what? I still need the tool, can I generalise it for the market? Is it even worth trying?
3 likes • Aug 24
I'm in the same boat. I'm working on a CRM as I type this for my own business. The way I see it, if you build something for your target audience to easily navigate and there is a proposition/feature other apps don't offer then it'll work out with the right beta users and feedback. I'm using ai as an anonymous feedback loop to help users get the job done based on real world cases. The idea is to encourage professionals to share their experiences and the ai takes that info and provide feedback if the asking user will be capable of completing the job or provide useful info about what to look for. Still in production but I have a handful of interested users waiting on the beta launch I'll update when I get their feedback.
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Abdulla Aljahmi
2
13points to level up
@abdulla-aljahmi-7437
Aspiring saaspreneur. Learning as I go and dissecting solutions for that aha moment. Success leaves clues!

Active 22d ago
Joined Aug 24, 2025