As indie developers, we’re constantly juggling between attracting users and maintaining a quality product. Many independent websites today chase traffic at the cost of usability. Cluttered interfaces, overlooked details, and complicated workflows often frustrate users.
A few days ago, following a senior developer’s advice, I decided to rethink Photocollagemaker.io:

Even with simplification, there’s a tricky question:
How can an indie site deliver feature-rich tools without overwhelming users or compromising performance?
We are exploring:
Building an indie website isn’t just about traffic. It’s about creating an effortless, engaging experience. With Photocollagemaker.io, focusing on clarity, usability, and attention to detail has turned it into a platform where users feel comfortable creating, exploring, and coming back.
💬 I’d love to hear from other indie developers: how do you balance powerful features with simplicity?
When “improving” is actually the wrong move
Validating an idea to help professionals reply safely to difficult work messages
Nice post, thanks for sharing! I particularly like the focus on image processing performance.
One thing I realized while doing a lot of product photography: watermarking many images in batch often slows down rendering or export times, especially if the watermark is large or semi-transparent.
Would love to hear how others are optimizing batch watermark + export speed — what resolutions or compression settings you use, or what software seems fastest.