u/Commercial-Age-4932

▲ 0 r/Mom

I built a tool that looks at your fridge and tells you exactly what to cook, would anyone actually use this?

I built a tool that looks at your fridge and tells you exactly what to cook, would anyone actually use this?

Hey everyone, I've been working on something and want honest feedback before I go further.

The problem I'm trying to solve: you grocery shop, life gets busy, and by Wednesday half the fridge is forgotten and headed for the trash. You end up ordering out not because there's no food, but because figuring out what to do with it feels like a puzzle.

The idea is simple: you photograph your fridge, and the app builds you a 3–5 day meal plan using what's already there. It prioritizes stuff expiring soon, works around dietary preferences, and optionally gives you a short list of 3 to 5 cheap items to grab to complete the meals.

Quick questions:

Is this something you'd actually use?

Would you pay $5–8/month for it?

What would make you trust it enough to try?

trying to figure out if this is worth building. Brutal honesty appreciated.

reddit.com
u/Commercial-Age-4932 — 8 days ago

I built a tool that looks at your fridge and tells you exactly what to cook, would anyone actually use this?

I built a tool that looks at your fridge and tells you exactly what to cook, would anyone actually use this?

Hey everyone, I've been working on something and want honest feedback before I go further.

The problem I'm trying to solve: you grocery shop, life gets busy, and by Wednesday half the fridge is forgotten and headed for the trash. You end up ordering out not because there's no food, but because figuring out what to do with it feels like a puzzle.

The idea is simple: you photograph your fridge, and the app builds you a 3–5 day meal plan using what's already there. It prioritizes stuff expiring soon, works around dietary preferences, and optionally gives you a short list of 3 to 5 cheap items to grab to complete the meals.

Quick questions:

Is this something you'd actually use?

Would you pay $5–8/month for it?

What would make you trust it enough to try?

trying to figure out if this is worth building. Brutal honesty appreciated.

reddit.com
u/Commercial-Age-4932 — 8 days ago

I built a tool that looks at your fridge and tells you exactly what to cook, would anyone actually use this?

I built a tool that looks at your fridge and tells you exactly what to cook, would anyone actually use this?

Hey everyone, I've been working on something and want honest feedback before I go further.

The problem I'm trying to solve: you grocery shop, life gets busy, and by Wednesday half the fridge is forgotten and headed for the trash. You end up ordering out not because there's no food, but because figuring out what to do with it feels like a puzzle.

The idea is simple: you photograph your fridge, and the app builds you a 3–5 day meal plan using what's already there. It prioritizes stuff expiring soon, works around dietary preferences, and optionally gives you a short list of 3 to 5 cheap items to grab to complete the meals.

Quick questions:

Is this something you'd actually use?

Would you pay $5–8/month for it?

What would make you trust it enough to try?

Genuinely trying to figure out if this is worth building. Brutal honesty appreciated.

reddit.com
u/Commercial-Age-4932 — 8 days ago
▲ 0 r/ECE

I'm a incoming 2nd year at a engineering university and have to decide between electrical and computer engineering. Which is better for high cost of living areas and making more money? I am in Canada if it matters

reddit.com
u/Commercial-Age-4932 — 18 days ago

Hi I go to a school that does a general first year and now I have to specialize in which type of engineering. I want to work in tech. I was considering computer engineering but I heard the job market is really bad so I was suggested to do electrical instead as you can pivot to many industries. Is there merit to that? What seems to be the better choice . If it matters a lot of courses are shared but the electrical engineers take more circuits and stuff and computer takes a little less of them, in order to take some coding and programming classes. I'm not at a target school for big tech companies but it's still a prestigious rigorous engineering school in Canada (UAlberta)

reddit.com
u/Commercial-Age-4932 — 25 days ago