u/ivan-indie-dev

I built this in 72 hours and got paid before it was “ready”
▲ 15 r/buildinpublic_2026+2 crossposts

I built this in 72 hours and got paid before it was “ready”

I recently built and launched a small project called Twin-Phone.com

It’s a simple service for making calls to regular phone numbers.

You add balance, choose the destination, and pay per minute. Prices start from $0.02/min, depending on the country.

I’m also working on phone number rental, so users can rent numbers for receiving calls or using them in small business workflows.

I built the first version in about 72 hours, and I already got my first paying customers. That honestly feels a bit unreal - going from an idea to something people actually pay for in just a few days is a great feeling.

The product is still early. I’m improving the UI, onboarding, pricing pages, and the overall calling experience. There are definitely rough edges, but I’m shipping fast and learning from real users.
I’m sharing it here not as a big polished launch, but more as a small founder update. I’d really appreciate honest feedback.

Any feedback would mean a lot🙌

u/ivan-indie-dev — 9 days ago
▲ 6 r/saasbuild+1 crossposts

Hey everyone!

I created twin-phone.com a simple Skype alternative for calls, virtual numbers, and SMS.

I wanted to make something that feels easy from the first minute. You register, top up, pick what you need and start calling.

No subscriptions, no hidden fees, no overloaded dashboard.

- calls from $0.02/min
- virtual phone numbers
- receiving SMS
- clean and simple design

flexible plans for business and enterprise users

Feel free to contact me support@twin-phone.com

I’m still improving the product and would really love to hear honest feedback. What looks useful, what feels missing, what should be changed?

Thanks to everyone who checks it out 🙌

u/ivan-indie-dev — 21 days ago

I’ve been trying to figure out the most cost-effective way to call international landline numbers, especially customer support lines (airlines, hotels)

Regular carrier rates are still pretty insane if you get stuck on hold for a while, and even some apps like Google Voice/Viber Out can add up depending on the country.

I’m curious what people here are using in 2026. Are VoIP apps still the best option, or are there better alternatives now?

reddit.com
u/ivan-indie-dev — 22 days ago