Hello HN,<p>I’m taking a year off to live off my savings and work on an idea, but I don’t have one (or maybe I have many)<p>So I’m asking for your help to list ideas you want to see happen but don’t have the time to make happen yourself, I’ll then pick one and try to execute it. I’ll also blog about the process along the way so you’ll be able to follow (and hopefully give feedback along the way)<p>It will be like an open startup studio driven by the community.<p>Thank you!
A data transfer tool.<p>So many people are working with data professionally, and there are hundreds of solutions for analytics, data warehouses, time series databases, etc.<p>Yet getting data from one silo to another is annoying, and usually requires writing complex scripts to transform data from one format to another. If you're not familiar with something like Python that will be very difficult.<p>I'm thinking of things like this:<p>- download data from a REST API and store in a CSV file<p>- scan log files and put data into Redshift<p>- copy data from MS Access to PostgreSQL<p>- extract info from email messages and store it in a spreadsheet<p>There are solutions to some of these problems, but I think there is a huge opportunity in this space. Right now a lot of data science still requires a lot of irrelevant technical knowledge, and a powerful GUI could allow people to focus more on what they want to do rather than how to do it.
If you don't have an idea do not take off for a year to "play house" with a startup. If you've read any of the advice on this site the startup it's mostly about your idea. And it's best to be passionate about that idea and have a strong connection and urge to solve it.<p>I can't imagine anyone being successful with someone else's idea.<p>If you want to take a year off for fun or any other reason that's fine of course.
I posted this on another thread, about ideas I'd like to work on:<p>1. Uber for private tutoring/students. I live in a university town and there's plenty of college kids wanting to teach schoolkids.<p>2. Random story/character generator based off tropes.<p>3. Punch card for babysitting, especially for the late night tiers that babysitters are reluctant to charge extra on.<p>4. Recipe app, focused on instant things like bread makers and pressure cookers.<p>5. Github but for recipes (this is really just an excuse to make fork puns)<p>6. A chat with anonymous strangers community, similar to Omegle, except you post something similar to a tweet, and people can chat with you based on it. So you could make a post complaining about your boss, or how happy you are to get a job, then someone can chat with you about it. My main worry is that this could degrade into 4chan and it would be an uphill battle to moderate it.<p>7. Gamification productivity app. Probably just a checklist, ala Habitica, or it could be integrated with Pomodoro Technique.
> Looking for ideas...<p>Look for problems to solve. Problems are goldmines.<p>On this subject, Peter Diamandis is brilliant> <a href="http://podcast.diamandis.com/2015/10/19/episode-11-problems-are-goldmines/" rel="nofollow">http://podcast.diamandis.com/2015/10/19/episode-11-problems-...</a>
Probably better to work on one of your own ideas. Write down every idea you have, write out pros and cons for each, can you combine them? Then figure out simple business plans for each, keep it simple, find you competitors and learn from them, find your customers and learn from them, what resources you need to build a mvp, how are you going to market that, how do you plan to grow the business from the mvp.<p>From all this research hopefully you will get a better feeling for which of your ideas are worth following up, and their potential.
Treat your business as if you were investing. Would you spend your hard earned $100k on a startup with no idea, no plan, and no exit strategy. And would you bank all of your life’s savings on it?<p>The time to quit and do this is when you have some customers and revenue, a plan, and need the time to grow it. Take a vacation, start it, and get your first customer, and work on it in your free time.
If you want to take a year off for a break more to you. But I wouldn't quit to work on an idea that you don't have yet. You'll be wasting a precious opportunity that can be taken advantage of when you do have something you're passionate about to work on.
There is a thing in my GitHub (in profile) that you could work on. It's possibly not up your alley as it's probably not monetizable. You've implied that matters to you, but not explicitly stated it. So I'm tossing that out there.
>I’m taking a year off to live off my savings and work on an idea, but I don’t have one<p>Why take a year if you are clueless as of what you want to do? Do some traveling and air your head. If you still cannot find something you want to do, go back to your 9-5 job.