u/Due_Hovercraft_4980

I’ve been using Google Workspace for work/projects… and I feel like Sheets

I rely heavily on Google Sheets + Docs for organizing things, tracking data, and managing projects. But over time, I keep running into the same issue: Things start clean… then slowly become chaotic. Formulas break, structure changes, data gets duplicated, and it becomes harder to maintain than I expected. So I wanted to ask: What’s the most frustrating part of working inside Google Workspace for you right now?

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u/Due_Hovercraft_4980 — 3 days ago

Airtable starts simple… but at some point it feels like everything becomes messy and hard to manage

I really like Airtable for organizing projects and data. But I’ve noticed something over time… Once tables start growing, things get complicated fast. Fields, views, filters, relations… everything becomes harder to manage than expected. And I often end up thinking: “This should be easier to clean or restructure than it is.” So I wanted to ask: What’s the most frustrating part of using Airtable when your base starts getting bigger?

reddit.com
u/Due_Hovercraft_4980 — 5 days ago
▲ 9 r/Slack

Slack feels powerful… but I feel like I’m constantly drowning in messages and losing important stuff

I’ve been using Slack for work and team communication, and I get why it’s so popular. But I can’t ignore one thing… It feels like the more active the workspace gets, the harder it becomes to actually keep track of what matters. Important messages get buried so fast, and I end up scrolling or searching way too much just to find things I know were discussed. I wanted to ask people who use Slack daily: What’s the most annoying part of your Slack workflow right now that still doesn’t feel solved properly?

reddit.com
u/Due_Hovercraft_4980 — 5 days ago
▲ 1 r/canva

Canva is amazing… but I feel like content creation still takes longer than it should

I’ve been using Canva a lot for content creation lately — thumbnails, posts, simple designs. And I can’t lie, it makes things way easier than traditional design tools. But there’s still this feeling I can’t ignore… Even with Canva, creating content at scale still feels repetitive. Same steps… same adjustments… over and over. So I wanted to ask people who use it daily: What’s the most annoying or repetitive part of your Canva workflow right now?

reddit.com
u/Due_Hovercraft_4980 — 5 days ago

If Figma had ONE plugin that doesn’t exist yet but would save you hours, what would it be?

I’m trying to understand real workflow gaps in Figma from people who use it daily. Not “nice-to-have” features… but real pain points that waste time. If you could build ONE plugin that would instantly make your design workflow faster or easier, what would it do?

reddit.com
u/Due_Hovercraft_4980 — 6 days ago
▲ 7 r/Notion

If you could add ONE feature to Notion that would instantly make your workflow smoother, what would it be?

I’m trying to understand what heavy Notion users actually struggle with day-to-day. Not the obvious stuff… but the small missing things you only notice after using it for a long time. Like things you still have to do manually that you feel should just exist by default. If you had the ability to add just one feature to Notion right now, what would it be?

reddit.com
u/Due_Hovercraft_4980 — 6 days ago
▲ 4 r/ManusAiAgent+1 crossposts

Can Manus Mobile Apps Be Fully Maintained Independently After Export?

For those building mobile apps with Manus, can exported React Native/Expo projects be fully maintained independently after generation? I currently use Manus with GitHub + Supabase + external deployment instead of Manus-native hosting for websites. I’m wondering if mobile apps can follow the same ownership model: Manus for generation GitHub for code ownership Supabase/Firebase for backend Expo/EAS or Android Studio for builds direct Play Store/App Store publishing Has anyone successfully shipped apps this way without relying on Manus subscriptions after generation?

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u/Due_Hovercraft_4980 — 13 days ago