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u/Lane Lane · 19 hr ago

In modern software development, creating and maintaining test cases can be time-consuming. AI test generator offers a way to streamline this process by automatically generating tests based on application behavior, requirements, or historical data.

These tools can analyze code, user flows, or APIs and produce relevant test scenarios, reducing manual effort and accelerating the testing cycle. This is especially useful in agile environments where features are added frequently, and maintaining traditional test suites becomes challenging.

AI test generator also helps improve test coverage. By identifying edge cases or scenarios that might be overlooked by humans, they ensure that critical paths and potential vulnerabilities are tested consistently. This leads to more reliable and robust applications.

Another advantage is adaptability. As applications evolve, AI-generated tests can update themselves based on changes in the system, helping teams maintain up-to-date validation without rewriting large portions of the test suite.

By integrating AI test generators into QA workflows, teams can reduce manual effort, enhance coverage, and accelerate delivery while maintaining high-quality standards.

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u/m m · 20 hr ago

A user on X had tweeted today (hence deleted) that their confidentiality was breached when blinkit swapped their sensitive visa documents with someone else's application.

Blinkit, Zomato's quick-commerce app, lets customers upload PDFs for fast prints from dark stores, but a recent complaint about printing visa documents highlighted risks as operators review files, check them before packing, and store data.

Others shared mishaps like receiving a child's political map instead of court papers or a stranger's bank statements and PAN details. While Blinkit apologizes and claims to delete files after printing, many advise against using it for confidential info, favoring personal printers instead.

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u/m m · 21 hr ago

Google is inviting AI-first startups to apply for Google for Startups Accelerator in India.

A three month, equity-free program for Indian AI startups building Agentic AI, Multimodal AI, Physical AI solutions or developing specialized Sovereign AI models.

Get expert mentorship across AI, Cloud, Product, Design and Growth, and so much more!

Applications closes on April 19, 2026.

Read more here.

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u/MattSink MattSink · 23 hr ago

Your site is live. So why isn't it converting?

Launching a website without a developer in 2026 is not the hard part. The hard part is building one that actually works — communicates your value in seconds and moves people toward a decision.

Most founders treat no-code as a shortcut to publishing. But speed alone doesn't create trust, clarity, or conversions. The founders who win aren't the fastest publishers. They're the most disciplined iterators.

🚨 Why your good-looking page isn't converting

A polished page can still fail commercially. Visitors need to answer three questions instantly:

👉 Is this for me? 👉 What does it actually do? 👉 What happens when I click?

Generic positioning, vague copy, and buried CTAs are the biggest culprits — and these are strategic problems, not design problems. No animation or color palette will fix them.

🎯 Start with outcome, not layout

Before opening any builder, answer two things:

✅ What is the one action I want visitors to take? ✅ Who exactly is this page for?

"Small business owners" is not an audience. "First-time founders in South Asia raising their pre-seed" is. One objective, one audience — everything else follows.

🏗️ The page structure that actually works

🔹 Relevance — State who you help and what outcome you deliver. If visitors don't see themselves in your headline, they're gone.

🔹 Mechanism — Explain how it works in plain terms. Path from problem to result, no feature lists.

🔹 Confidence — Place specific proof near relevant claims. One context-rich testimonial beats five generic ones.

🔹 Action — One dominant CTA. Tell people exactly what happens after they click.

For a deeper breakdown, this guide on how to build a standout no-code website in 2026covers it thoroughly.

🤝 Trust is a placement problem, not a volume problem

Users evaluate credibility at the moment of doubt — not at a social proof block at the bottom of the page. Map your claims to nearby proof:

⚡ Fast implementation? Show a timeline. 📈 Strong results? Show specific numbers. 🔒 Risk-related promise? Address it directly, not vaguely.

📱 Mobile is a release gate, not an afterthought

Before any publish, check these non-negotiables:

✔️ Value proposition visible without scrolling ✔️ Trust signal appears before deep scroll ✔️ Tap targets comfortable on mobile ✔️ Forms work with mobile keyboards

Any failure should block the release. Not delay it — block it.

🧪 One test at a time

Push five changes at once and you'll never know what caused the lift. Isolate one variable per cycle — headline, CTA, proof format. Define your hypothesis before publishing. Write down what happened. Those notes become your real playbook.

The real edge no-code gives you

No-code gives you leverage — the ability to learn faster than teams stuck in engineering queues. But only if you maintain discipline around structure, proof, and testing.

Build with intention. Test with focus. Improve with every release.

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u/m m · 3 d ago

YC President Garry Tan on their internal social announced that Delve has been asked to leave YC.

The same has been confirmed by a tweet from Delve co-founder Selin Kocalar.

After the initial substack article on them about using generic templates for SOC 2 reported earlier, more information came about about them where details emerged that they likely stole the IP of a fellow Y Combinator company (SimStudio) and ripped off another (Oneleet).

The link for Delve on YC's company list has also been removed: https://www.ycombinator.com/companies/delve

YC has not officially announce anything as of yet.

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u/sdcy_sora2 sdcy_sora2 · 5 d ago

I've been exploring AI video generation tools and recently came across Seedance 2.0. Here's what makes it stand out:

Key Features:

• Text-to-video and image-to-video generation

• Precise motion control with keyframe editing

• High-quality 1080p output

• Multiple aspect ratios support

• Fast generation - videos up to 10 seconds

What impressed me most is the motion control capability. You can actually guide how elements move in the video, which gives much more creative control compared to other AI video tools.

The output quality is solid for marketing content, social media, and product demos. It's particularly useful if you need consistent visual styles across multiple videos.

Check it out: https://www.xmk.com/seedance/seedance-2-pro

Has anyone else tried this? Would love to hear your experiences with AI video generation tools.

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