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Hi HN,

I built this because I own a 3D printer and kept bookmarking designs. Most 3D print platforms are flooded with low-quality or very “maker-centric” content.

Volumes is a small, curated gallery of well-designed 3D printable objects (lighting, storage, desk accessories, home objects). It doesn’t host files or sell anything — everything links to the original source.

This is very early and intentionally simple. I’m mostly curious whether others are missing a more design-focused way to discover printable objects.

Feedback very welcome.


Have you used getwaitlist.com? Was there something you were missing?


Thank you! A few things: 1. We're a more affordable for new founders. All features are available in the free plan, even Zapier, API etc. (it just comes with a small branding) and if you want to remove the branding, the pricing just scales with you while you grow your list. 2. Feature-wise, we are building a toolkit for founders here. So we already have some other things like email campaigns. So you only need us to also send product updates etc. to your users, without paying for and using an extra tool. 3. Of course it's a personal opinion, but user experience is extremely important to us. We believe it's that we've created the simplest way to create and customize your form/page and emails - with or without technical knowledge.


We just opened up our beta. It takes a minute to create your project and be ready to collect sign ups. Full customization and people can invite friends to climb up your list.


For SEO, you should pur this in the title: "Waitlists with built-in referrals"


Thank you! Did it on the website now.


Wanted to have a fun way of discovering domains for the next side project or startup. So I made Butter.Bingo last weekend - a website/newsletter that sends out a new domain at a random time of the week. All domains can be directly purchased, without price request, bidding etc. Hope you enjoy it. Looking for ideas and new domains to add, so feel free to reach out!


Hey, creator of Minimal Gallery here. Thanks to everyone who's visiting. The word "minimal" doesn't have a lot to do with minimalism in this case. When starting out 10 years ago this was correct, but nowadays I'm just focussing on websites that don't do scroll-hijacking, don't involve a bunch of crazy 3d-animations or in general aren't simply usable. So the only real requirements are "functional" and "usable". Sorry for the confusion - feel free to reach out with feedback. For example I only recently added the jobs section because it was requested many times. If you have any other ideas, don't hesitate to reach out.


So how does palette.supply qualify? It’s a hard-to-navigate scrolljacking feast. But it’s certainly visually appealing.


Literally the first one I clicked on, it’s an utter nightmare to navigate.


So if that is how you define minimal what would you call my site?: kemendo.com

Austere?


Personally I call that perfect.

I found examples in the Minimal Design gallery that I would not choose to call minimal but I don't want to make an argument about form over function. Needless to say I like being able to easily navigate and locate what a website wants to communicate and having to scroll a lot I feel defeats that (I'm also cruisin' on an old Celeron at the moment).

Regardless this gallery doesn't appear to be going for minimal in function but minimal in form and for that I say it is a nice collection and there is some cool art and presentations here.


Thank you :)


Primitive? I don't mean that in a negative way, I like it better than most websites.



I took that down - but didn't fix the link thanks I'll take that down too

It was basically a first draft of:

https://kemendo.com/Myth-of-Scarcity.html


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