How is this more useful than the current state of domain name idea generators, which also do a search for the availability of the domain?
It just seems, slower?
The feat of doing that with ai alone might make an interesting blog post. But the end result as a product isn’t something I’m going to use just because it’s using ai.
We're at this weird point where devs will both complain that VSCode is slow and bad because it runs on electron, and then insist that every decision and line of code they make runs through a giant Rube Goldberg machine before they type it.
My only complaint about VS Code is the naming. I'll be googling for actual Visual Studio (2021, 2019, 2015, etc) specific things, and find myself with VS Code specific results all the time. I wish Microsoft would have given it a better more SEO friendly name, they didn't learn from naming SQL Server I suppose.
Go has the same problem, which annoys me, a search engine company didn't think that one through.
Please, major corporations, give better names to your products that are unique enough to dominate search results. Invent new words for all I care.
.NET 7 and beyond consolidates Framework and Core. I think they're going to just stick to just .NET moving forward. Eventually Framework and Core will be EOL'd.
People are self-interested. Electron only offers the maker of the tool value but not the end user. The end user finds AI extremely valuable and the costs are on the maker.
If we could convince all the people who hate Electron to code GUI stacks across the major programming languages that exist, maybe then we could get somewhere. Electron just gives you a consistent cross-platform environment to develop GUIs on using one of the most well known and understood technologies: front-end web.
One thing I feel is that the current domain idea generators have a complicated UI wrapped on top of AI which makes it hard to iterate on the ideas and have a follow up conversaion. I felt that having a chat UI with availablity check is a better way to handle that.
This is just the initial version and I am going to improve the prompts probabally finetune it to give better results.
Also I will write the blog post soon.
Cool - not sure I'd want my prompt to be seen by others (which you can achieve by changing the incremental id in the url). Maybe use a uuid instead if you want to make it shareable?
Sure, Thanks for the feedback. I will implement uuid also. You can consider signup if you want the url to be private. For now I have made guest searches public (As there is no identity involved)
You could also add a checkbox to make the URL private, like what Qualys SSL Server Test does. I’m not sure people want to sign up on yet another website (what will you do with my data? Where is your privacy policy?) just to generate domain names.
Ended up finding a Mermaid Diagram(?) generator on the same site (with the same incrementing id vulnerability). I typed in "A LLM" as prompt and got a great response: https://huehive.co/tools/diagrams/5633
Well, hypothetically, if they do, then they just buy the `.com` and wait for the Startup/Company to become popular and sell it to them or their competitor(s). So far, any succeeding company beyond a certain clip, always buys the `.com` at a price, eventually.
I wish companies would stop doing that. Zoom(.us) shouldn't have bought zoom.com and Notion(.so) shouldn't have bought notion.com. Not only could they have saved a few million bucks for themselves (& by extension their users) on something which even to this day serves no purpose no other than redirection, but they could also have helped set precedents, reducing pressure on future companies to acquire .com domains.
I get very poor results from this. I get much better results when I just use chatGPT directly with some custom prompt that asks for good domain names. Here is just one example
> trading investment prestigious innovative fund quant
It gave me weird animal puns as suggestions, without any reference to animals in my query. Is there maybe some mixup in the backend, reuse of gpt conversations?
Also FurryFriendsHub.com it’s apparently available if anyone is interested! ;)
I don't really get it how it works. I wrote down a bunch of keywords but what it spat out was a long sentence with most of the keywords and perhaps some related ones together.
I’m going to be honest, this just sounds like user error to me. Try typing something simple like “Can you generate some domain names related to bike sales?”. The results aren’t perfect but I thought it was pretty interesting and fairly useful. If you’re doing nothing but typing keywords with no other information such as “Can you generate domain names relating to the following keywords” of course it’s just going to spit out those keywords.
Thanks. I have also noticed this in some cases. Sometime GPT-3 does not follow the prompt. Please retry with a new query. It works in most cases. I will improve the prompt or to make sure this does not happen.
"Please generate domain names based on given query. Give multiple creative options. You are an expert domain name generator. Be presise and always output code in
Domains Code
<list of domains with new lines>
format."
It just seems, slower?
The feat of doing that with ai alone might make an interesting blog post. But the end result as a product isn’t something I’m going to use just because it’s using ai.
The job to be done is not to use ai to do x.
Tho I would be interested to read the blog post..
We're at this weird point where devs will both complain that VSCode is slow and bad because it runs on electron, and then insist that every decision and line of code they make runs through a giant Rube Goldberg machine before they type it.
Go has the same problem, which annoys me, a search engine company didn't think that one through.
Please, major corporations, give better names to your products that are unique enough to dominate search results. Invent new words for all I care.
I do agree though, they did it very confusingly.
Their naming for all of this is a disaster.
If you've ever used Copilot, it's surprisingly fast. It definitely leads to net less time spent typing.
> trading investment prestigious innovative fund quant
< trendtrackersite.com
< buzzviralnetwork.com
< chatterwavehub.com
< trendsnetworking.com
Not really cool or useful to me.
AI domain generator
domains
1. AiGeniusHub.com
2. IntelliAiWave.com
3. AiMasteryNetwork.com
4. SmartAiForge.com
5. AiSavvyLab.com
result: "nomadventurequest.com"
...at least we know that nomadventurequest.com is available I suppose, saves me less than one minute to look that up.