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This is look pretty promising. Do you guys are focussing on a specific use case or any voice AI use case in general?


Thanks for the kind words @ajabish.

We are more of a horizontal platform and can support a wide variety of use cases. We are serving large BPO call centres on our managed hosted service for outbound and inbound cases.

There are individual builders also trying to build inbound use cases for personal use or trying to build their business on top of Dograh.


Netflix introduced ad-supported tier in 2022 and things been great since then - subscriber growth, price increase ... and stock has responded really well.

But was there a different path there?


All those price increases lost me as a customer. It’s going to keep going up until people start to cancel over it.

I’d rather not have Netflix at all than have it with ads.


I’ve seen this “stress ≠ skill” gap play out again and again. The Microsoft study the OP cites is brutal. Yet most prep advice (“just grind LeetCode”) still ignores the cortisol factor.

One thing that’s helped me, as both an occasional interviewer and a frequent interviewee, is recreating the stress loop on my own terms. Friends rarely push hard enough, and a paid coach is $150+ an hour. Lately I’ve been working on a little side-project Tough Tongue AI: a voice-driven agent that drops you into a live code editor, throws follow-up questions, even interrupts when you go off-road, then gives a feedback at end. It’s not magic, but after a few sessions the “somebody’s watching me” adrenaline spike starts to feel familiar.

If live coding interviews are here to stay, a repeatable way to train the physiological side of the test, not just the algorithms would be helpful!


one thing that helps me psychologically is not caring. Or tricking myself into not caring.

I learned this in my 20’s. I made it to about 10 different on site interviews over a summer, and was totally burnt out. I was spending hours prepping before each interview, and really putting in the effort! At the last minute a company tried to squeeze me in for an interview before a vacation i had planned. I reluctantly agreed, and i completely winged it. Zero prep, i showed up ready to (mentally) go on vacation lol. Guess what? I aced most of the interview and ended up getting an offer 3 days later.

Of all the interviews i performed the best when i went in with 0 expectations and 0 stress on myself. That’s when it clicked for me.

Easier said than done though. It’s not always easy to get into that mindset.


One of the best tools to learn.


Our Voice AI Agent makes it extremely simple and engaging to learn new language - create card dynamically, asks multiple-choice-questions, uses diagrams, does role play ...

Demo: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2iSIVnLR-nM Website: https://app.toughtongueai.com/


Why is video 1.5x accelerated?


Idea here to provide fun, human-like conversation with AI voice agent backed by high quality system design content.

ps: It's still experimental and capped to a token limit.


I created a collection of PM interviews based on my experience of interviewing Google, Amazon, and Intuit among other.

This a free resource for looking for feedback and whether it's helpful.


Removed Show HN


That would have been more fun to see. But I was trying to figure what VC data says about AI wave. What's growing and under-invested segment etc


Sorry. Realized I added very few details. Always-On Debugger is a tool that enhances your terminal experience by automatically detecting errors and providing debugging assistance using AI. It acts as a wrapper around your existing terminal, intercepting commands and their outputs to offer real-time debugging support. It's really simple to use and install: just prefix your terminal command with "debug".

It was our AI devtool hackathon project. Wondering there is more to this idea to improve debugging experience in terminal or that's it!


I try to give 30 minutes of time exploring what's new. But I learn new stack way later when I actually need to used in my project (and I vaguely recall reading about it somewhere).


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