Crypto攻城狮|7月 08, 2026 10:24
Most people in the cryptocurrency industry have a common problem: staying up late to watch the market, sitting for long periods of time, drinking sugary drinks to prolong their lives, and being articulate about position management. However, in the end, they fail to take care of their own health and their health declines day by day.
So I used @ dappOS_com's xUbble to create a habit check-in website for myself, called "Compound Interest Life" - wealth relies on compound interest, and physical health also relies on compound interest.
First, look at the things that come out. Four habits: going to bed early, building muscle, quitting staring at the plate, and quitting sugary drinks. Each habit has a grid wall of GitHub contribution patterns, and one grid is lit up every day when checking in. Light up one grid every day, let the long-term trend speak for you
What really surprised me was the details. I only mentioned the need to clock in and the grid wall, but it has its own copy for each habit: the column for going to bed reads' close early, preserve complete execution for tomorrow ', muscle building is' treat training as a long-term position, don't bet on short-term emotions', and quitting sugary drinks is' control fluctuations, start with the drink section'. Continuous clocking in has a combo flame, and if the card breaks, I won't scold you. The status bar only says "waiting to rebuild the position", and the historical accumulation is always retained - it calls this "historical position always retained".
The pop-up window that popped up during check-in said, 'This grid is not the end, it's the continuation of the trend.' To be honest, it gave me a feeling of encouragement and made me feel like I was getting better with compound interest every day.
Speaking of how it came about, it's just a round of conversation throughout the entire process.
I expressed the requirements in plain language in xUbble's coding mode, and it first generated a complete product specification for me in reverse: visual specifications, check-in rules, comfort logic after card breakage, wallet data binding, and even written in black and white the acceptance criteria that "false data cannot be used to impersonate user progress". I haven't changed a single word, just click confirm. After more than ten minutes, the website was operational.
I didn't write a single line of code, didn't buy a server, didn't provide a domain name and API key, and all expenses were deducted by credit. If we switch to traditional processes, this set of things requires a product manager to create prototypes, write documents, design diagrams, develop front-end development, and store back-end data. No one can do it alone.
And don't think it can only be used as a small tool for daily life - for us in the cryptocurrency industry, its true power actually lies in the trading scene.
The official recently demonstrated a case where a user only stated one goal: "Build a website to track the Polymarket market and sudden developments related to Iran." Bubble Code directly routes the requirements to the Polymarket Agent SOP, automatically accesses real-time market data, matches monitoring keywords, and delivers Iran Pulse as a complete working dashboard covering probability, trading volume, liquidity, abnormal changes, and sudden signals - a market monitoring product that can be refreshed, deployed, and used immediately, not the static demo that can only be screenshot and pushed.
If you understand this case, you will understand: geopolitical event monitoring, on chain signal tracking, and event arbitrage assistance. These trading infrastructures that used to require a technical team to complete are now the same process as me doing check-in stations - setting goals and obtaining results. I have already decided on the next thing to do: a small tool that keeps an eye on several events that I am concerned about and reminds me of changes in odds, or a round of conversation.
After using it, I have a general understanding of the differences between xUbble, Cursor, and Lovable tools. Others deliver code, but you have to be the project manager yourself, responsible for acceptance, bug fixing, and deployment; It delivers a complete result that can be directly run - requirement decomposition, specification development, and deployment. The entire process is completed by itself, and you are only responsible for speaking. What I give is the goal, what I get is the result.
This is actually a very big change for our current world. Sam Altman and Dario Amodei are both saying that a billion dollar one person company will soon emerge, and the financing of Replit and Lovable in the past two years also confirms the capital's bet on the direction of "non-technical people doing software". And xUbble's choice is even more ruthless: not to help you write code, but to completely prevent you from touching the code.
A habit check-in station may not be a business, but the logic is logical: today I can create a check-in tool for myself in twenty minutes, and tomorrow any ordinary person with customers, ideas, and no technical team can use the same method to run a small business and verify their ideas.
From today on, my self-discipline will be the same as my position, visualized, reversible, and compound interest. The first grid has been lit up, and every time you review it, you will see that you are making little progress, and your health index will also snowball.
The website is here, and those interested can also use it: https://cm-4ba909703ba90e6a-site-18d04e67eb1a.bubbleupdappos.workers.dev/
Share To
Timeline
HotFlash
APP
X
Telegram
CopyLink