4
2 Comments

I built a coverage mapping tool for a tiny, unglamorous niche (wireless ISPs)

A few months ago I started building GridVisio — a browser-based coverage mapping tool for fixed wireless ISPs (WISPs). Not a trendy market, but a real one: small wireless internet providers who plan tower coverage by hand or pay per-export with the one dominant tool in the space.

What it does:

  • Plot sector antennas (azimuth, beamwidth, radius)
  • Import subscriber lists, auto-classify served/unserved
  • Line-of-sight + Fresnel zone checks using real terrain data
  • FCC BDC/BEAD compliance exports (US regulatory filings WISPs must submit twice a year)
  • An embeddable widget for the WISP's own website — a visitor checks their address, the operator gets a qualified, line-of-sight-validated lead by email

Stack: Laravel 11 + Vue.js 3 + Google Maps, hosted on Hetzner.
Solo build, I'm a PHP developer based in Romania.

Free tier is permanent (1 project, 5 towers, 100 subscribers), paid plans start at $19/mo.

gridvisio.com

Happy to answer questions about the niche, the stack, or how I'm finding customers in such a specific market — that part has been the hardest part by far.

on June 19, 2026
  1. 1

    Reading this, I found myself less interested in the mapping features and more interested in how you're deciding where to focus.

    A niche product can accumulate a lot of valid requests from a small number of users.

    Sometimes the difficult part isn't saying yes.

    It's figuring out which "yes" actually defines the business.

  2. 1

    Looks a good project can you add it to https://dev.us.kg/t/share-tools

Trending on Indie Hackers
I got my first $159 in sales after realizing I was building in silence User Avatar 53 comments Three Days Before Launch, I Let My Own Tool Tear Me Apart User Avatar 37 comments I thought I was building a news visualization tool. Users thought it was a catch-up tool. User Avatar 34 comments I Rejected a $15K Acquisition Offer for My Multi-Agent IDE — Here's the Full Breakdown User Avatar 28 comments A pattern I keep seeing in EdTech: traffic isn't usually the problem. User Avatar 23 comments Priorities for launching a SaaS solo, with no budget User Avatar 22 comments