▲ 1 r/cursor+2 crossposts

Over a thousand visits on launch day and zero conversions

I just launched my page and got over a thousand visits on day one… and zero conversions.

My goal is simple: I want people to click through to my GitHub repo.
But even with ~1k visits and ~1k page views, almost no one is actually going to the repo.
So clearly I’m doing something wrong, but I’m not sure what.

I’m trying to figure out whether the issue is messaging, UX, trust, the CTA placement, or something else entirely.

If anyone here has experience with early‑stage landing pages or conversion optimization, I’d really appreciate your feedback.
What should I be looking at first?
What usually stops people from clicking through even when traffic is good?

Any advice or critique would help a lot.

reddit.com
u/DumbbMoneyy — 5 days ago
▲ 3 r/SaasDevelopers+2 crossposts

What am I doing wrong?

I've been advertising for two days and I'm getting great traffic on my website

But what I don't understand is why nobody is checking out the repo on GitHub. That's where you can download the platform and test it. If anyone can help me, I would be extremely grateful.

I know I just started, but it's strange, only 2 people viewed the repo.

I've included the link to the website and the repository; any feedback is welcome, both support and criticism. Thanks.

The website : Phylax

The GitHub repo :GitHub

u/DumbbMoneyy — 6 days ago

My AI coding agent tried to touch files it should never touch. So I built a local guardrail.

https://i.redd.it/cktu8xmg445h1.gif

AI coding agents are amazing until they touch the wrong file.

I had agents delete files, inspect things they shouldn’t, and get way too confident around sensitive project data.

So I built Phylax : a local safety layer that blocks risky file access before an AI agent touches your secrets.

No login.

No cloud.

No telemetry.

Just local rules for what agents can and cannot touch.

I’m collecting real failure cases from developers using Cursor, Claude Code, Windsurf, Cline, OpenCode, etc.

What’s the worst thing an AI coding agent has done in your project?

I'd love to know what you think about my project. I'm very interested in your feedback, and I'll be even happier if I get github stars. 😁

reddit.com
u/DumbbMoneyy — 6 days ago

My AI coding agent tried to touch files it should never touch. So I built a local guardrail.

AI coding agents are amazing until they touch the wrong file.

I had agents delete files, inspect things they shouldn’t, and get way too confident around sensitive project data.

So I built Phylax : a local safety layer that blocks risky file access before an AI agent touches your secrets.

No login.

No cloud.

No telemetry.

Just local rules for what agents can and cannot touch.

I’m collecting real failure cases from developers using Cursor, Claude Code, Windsurf, Cline, OpenCode, etc.

What’s the worst thing an AI coding agent has done in your project?

I'd love to know what you think about my project. I'm very interested in your feedback, and I'll be even happier if I get github stars. 😁

reddit.com
u/DumbbMoneyy — 7 days ago

My AI coding agent tried to touch files it should never touch. So I built a local guardrail.

​

AI coding agents are amazing until they touch the wrong file.

I had agents delete files, inspect things they shouldn’t, and get way too confident around sensitive project data.

So I built Phylax : a local safety layer that blocks risky file access before an AI agent touches your secrets.

No login.

No cloud.

No telemetry.

Just local rules for what agents can and cannot touch.

I’m collecting real failure cases from developers using Cursor, Claude Code, Windsurf, Cline, OpenCode, etc.

What’s the worst thing an AI coding agent has done in your project?

And I'd also like to know what you think of my project.

reddit.com
u/DumbbMoneyy — 7 days ago

Hi, I need help.

Hi, I'm new here and I'd like to know what other uses I can have for my agents besides automating tasks...

reddit.com
u/DumbbMoneyy — 25 days ago

I need help. I’m new to the world of ECU remapping and repair, and I’m starting from scratch. I want to avoid common mistakes and not waste time going down the wrong path.

If you could give me one key piece of advice based on your experience, what would it be to progress faster and make fewer errors?

reddit.com
u/DumbbMoneyy — 1 month ago

Hi, I’ve been seriously considering starting my own business for the past few months.

I see my uncle doing very well with his, and it makes me question my current situation. I have a stable 9-to-5 job that pays reasonably well, but it feels like I’m stuck in a repetitive cycle that’s slowly draining me. At the same time, the cost of living keeps rising, and I feel increasingly dependent on a job I don’t even enjoy.

What really drives me is my passion for tuning and customizing cars , both on the mechanical and electronic side. That’s what I genuinely want to pursue. The problem is, I don’t feel good enough yet. I’m afraid I’ll get rejected by garages if I apply, and that fear is holding me back from taking the first step.

I want to move forward, but I don’t know how to deal with the likely rejections or how to break into the industry.

What would you recommend I do to handle this phase and start progressing despite these doubts?

reddit.com
u/DumbbMoneyy — 1 month ago

A few days ago, I overheard a conversation between some colleagues who were discussing vibe coding. They were debating whether it makes you dumber or more productive. I think they’re both right: it makes you much more productive, but at the same time, it makes us lose some skills or at least, they aren't as sharp as they used to be.

What do you think ?

reddit.com
u/DumbbMoneyy — 1 month ago

I don’t understand how a major global event can happen and the markets don’t react in the short term. In trading, it seems like they react more in the long term, but not immediately. I don’t understand why this happens or what the logic of the market is. Can you help me understand, please?

reddit.com
u/DumbbMoneyy — 1 month ago