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July 6, 2026

Where Are You Guys Putting the Stuff You Build?

Builders ship constantly, but most side projects and PWAs have nowhere permanent to live. Here's the real problem with Twitter posts, personal sites, and one-day Product Hunt launches — and what SNAPP

Where Are You Guys Putting the Stuff You Build?

Real question. Not rhetorical.

You spent your weekend building something. Maybe it's a PWA, maybe it's an internal tool you turned into a real product, maybe it's the third side project this year that actually works. You shipped it. It's live. It does the thing.

So... where is it?

Not "where's the code." GitHub's got that covered. I mean where does a real human being go to find it, try it, and tell their friend about it?

The honest answers, and why they don't work

"I posted it on X/Twitter." Cool, it got 40 likes and vanished into the feed twelve hours later. Nobody's searching Twitter for apps.

"It's on my personal site." Sure, if anyone had a reason to visit your personal site. Most builders don't have the audience to make a solo landing page do any work.

"I'll submit it to the App Store." Then you remember the $99/year, the review process, the fact that it's a PWA and Apple doesn't really want it there anyway.

"It's just... on Product Hunt from that one day I launched it." Which was four months ago, and Product Hunt already forgot it exists.

This is the actual problem. Builders build. Constantly. Prolifically. And then the thing they built has nowhere permanent to live — nowhere that's built for discovery instead of a 24-hour spike of attention.

50 million apps got built. Most of them still don't have an address.

Not a repo. Not a landing page nobody visits. An actual address — the kind users go to when they're browsing for something new, the kind that gives you real analytics on who's clicking and converting, the kind where "Built by you" actually means something because it sits next to other real builders instead of disappearing into an algorithm.

That's the gap SNAPP Store exists to close. Not another marketplace gatekept by a 30% cut and a review board that takes three weeks to say no. A shelf. Built for the stuff indie builders actually make — PWAs, tools, side projects, weird useful things — with a listing flow you can finish in the time it takes to write this sentence, free while the shelves fill up.

So — where are you putting the stuff you build?

If the honest answer is "nowhere, really," that's not a you problem. That's an infrastructure problem, and it's the one we built SNAPP Store to fix.

List your build at www.thesnappstore.com