Latest news about Bitcoin and all cryptocurrencies. Your daily crypto news habit.
A couple of months ago, for fun and for a challenge, I set for myself the goal of learning React and the serverless architecture.
Luckily for me, the Serverless Stack came to my rescue.
The Serverless Stack tutorial is designed to teach you what is Serverless (and AWS Lambda in particular) and guides you through the creation of a simple note-taking app. Frank Wang (@fanjiewang) & Jay V (@jayair) have done an amazing job in creating a step-by-step tutorial that is easy to follow, clear and rich in explanation.
But now I digress.Iâve had an idea for a long time of a free, minimalist, no login required, note-taking app.
Why free, minimalist and open?Iâm not sure, but I do know that Iâve often found myself in the need of taking a quick note â like copying a snippet of code, making a grocery list or just dumping some quick thoughts â and being frustrated that I had to create a new Google doc, change the sharing settings, etc.
I wanted something quick and by âquickâ I mean open-write-save-share quick.
So I figured that if I needed something like this surely I couldnât be the only one?So I asked around if other people had the same problem, did my research and after weeks of customer development started coding straight away.
After 2 days it was ready. I called it QuickNote*
What is QuickNote?
QuickNote is a free, no-login-required, do-whatever-you-want and some-other-hyphenated-word note-taking app.
You can create notesâââthat can contain links, images, lists or snippets of codeâââon the fly and share them with your colleagues or friends in seconds.
As one guy has said on Product Hunt:
It is the digital equivalent to scraping a piece of paper to pass something really quick.
You can use it for whatever you want, but here are some ideas:
- Share notes with friends during Skype calls
- Answer simple customer support questions
- Share snippets of code with other programmers in your team
- Share recipes with your partner
- Send love notes to your partner
- Draft blog posts
- Create a grocery list
Launch and initial reaction
On September 28 I launched it on Product Hunt with modest success.
Since launching, over 30,000 quick notes have been created by over 10,000 people. An average of ~1,000 a day. The most active country is China. I wonder if it has anything to do with the fact that QuickNote is an anonymous service.
One of the main feature requests was a Chrome extension so that people could take notes from any tab.
On the 28th of October, I published the Official Chrome extension which I personally love because it makes taking notes from any tab ridiculously easy, which is exactly what I wanted in the first place.
.
QuickNote is now my de-facto way to take notes or even create a draft for blog posts (like this one).
Iâm not sure what will happen in the future or how people will use it but frankly, I donât care.I created QuickNote for myself and I love it. I have no plans to monetize it nor make it a âseriousâ project. QuickNote is hosted on AWS S3 and uses AWS Lambda as backend which means it would cost pennies even if it scaled to millions of people using it every month.
PS: If you have used QuickNote in any cool/different way, please let me know!
- Creativity is not really my second name but they say descriptive names are a good thing right?
How learning React led me to create an app used by 10K people was originally published in Hacker Noon on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.
Disclaimer
The views and opinions expressed in this article are solely those of the authors and do not reflect the views of Bitcoin Insider. Every investment and trading move involves risk - this is especially true for cryptocurrencies given their volatility. We strongly advise our readers to conduct their own research when making a decision.