Built a stupid-simple task management app that only shows one task at a time

Built a stupid-simple task management app that only shows one task at a time

I kept catching myself scrolling through my never-ending task list, feeling more drained than motivated. So I built a 100% free tiny web app that flips the script: it only shows you one task at a time.

No more analysis paralysis. No more “which of these 47 things should I do first?” Just one clear question: Do this now, or save it for later?

DoOneTask: a dead-simple, zero-bloat web app that forces you to focus.

This is NOT vibe coded. I wrote every line of the code.

What it does:

- You add some tasks.

- It shows you 1 task. That’s it

- You decide: “Do it” or “Later”

- Moves on to the next when you're ready

What it doesn’t do:

- No lists, tags, priorities, or due dates

- No accounts, signups, or emails

- No cloud sync, no tracking, no nonsense. Your tasks never leave your device.

Perfect for people who:

- Get overwhelmed by long lists

- Procrastinate by “organizing” instead of doing

- Want a friction-free way to actually check things off

Feedback is highly appreciated.

DoOneTask.com

reddit.com
u/ahmadlm — 10 hours ago

Built a stupid-simple task management app that only shows one task at a time

I kept catching myself scrolling through my never-ending task list, feeling more drained than motivated. So I built a 100% free tiny web app that flips the script: it only shows you one task at a time.

No more analysis paralysis. No more “which of these 47 things should I do first?” Just one clear question: Do this now, or save it for later?

DoOneTask: a dead-simple, zero-bloat web app that forces you to focus.

What it does:

- You add some tasks.

- It shows you 1 task. That’s it

- You decide: “Do it” or “Later”

- Moves on to the next when you're ready

What it doesn’t do:

- No lists, tags, priorities, or due dates

- No accounts, signups, or emails

- No cloud sync, no tracking, no nonsense. Your tasks never leave your device.

Perfect for people who:

- Get overwhelmed by long lists (ADHD?)

- Procrastinate by “organizing” instead of doing

- Want a friction-free way to actually check things off

Feedback is highly appreciated.

👉 DoOneTask.com

reddit.com
u/ahmadlm — 1 day ago
▲ 1 r/SaaS

After a lot of evenings/weekends building and testing, I finally launched a side project I’ve been working on: RoomTuned.

It analyzes room acoustics from a simple phone recording (clap or balloon pop) and generates a report with:

  • room score
  • detected acoustic issues
  • clarity/reverb analysis
  • treatment recommendations

The idea came from noticing how many creators (podcasters, YouTubers, musicians, home studio owners, even people constantly on Zoom/Meet calls) struggle with room sound issues like:

  • echo/reverb
  • muddiness
  • poor clarity
  • boxy sound
  • weird bass buildup

Improving room acoustics usually involves a lot of guesswork unless you go deep into measurement mics, REW, impulse responses, and other technical tools.

So I wanted to explore:
“How far can we simplify acoustic analysis while still keeping the output genuinely useful?”

Built with Django, PostgreSQL, Redis/Celery, OpenAI Responses API, TailwindCSS (daisyUI), and a bunch of audio feature extraction + validation logic.

Looking for feedback more than anything right now, even just thoughts on the landing page, idea, or whether you’d personally use something like this.

roomtuned.com

reddit.com
u/ahmadlm — 2 months ago
▲ 5 r/podcasting+1 crossposts

I’m curious how people here usually diagnose room sound issues.

Things like:

- echo/reverb

- muddy sound

- weird bass buildup

- boxy recordings

- lack of clarity

Do you mostly rely on:

- trial and error

- online advice

- measurement tools/software

- experience/your ears

- or just learn to live with it 😅

Would genuinely love to hear how different people approach this.

reddit.com
u/ahmadlm — 2 months ago
▲ 3 r/homerecordingstudio+1 crossposts

I’m trying to use my home office to record some personal projects but right now it’s just a pretty basic room with not much furniture and no acoustic treatment.

I don’t know much about acoustic treatment

so I’m not raelly sure where to start or what actually matters.

I recently tried a tool that says it analyzes your room from a short phone recording and gives suggestions.

It gave me a pretty detailed report with a bunch of recommendations

but I’m not sure how much of it I actually need to follwo or what would have most return on my spending.

If anyone has expereince with this kind of thing I’d really appreciate some help understanding it:

https://roomtuned.com/result/765111d1-89e0-40eb-adcf-1686ba8b6cea/

Thanks in advance

reddit.com
u/ahmadlm — 2 months ago