Recently, I definitely read an article on dev.to about developer analytics.
It talked about numbers. Charts. Insights. Probably very smart things.
Unfortunately, my memory had other plans.
What I do remember is this:
- The analytics weren’t showing properly
- Some data felt missing
- And I thought, “Hmm… this could be better”
Five minutes later, I forgot the article entirely.
But the frustration stayed.
So naturally, I did the most reasonable thing any developer would do:
👉 I started building a new web analytics platform.
The Problem (That I Half Remember)
From what I vaguely recall, the article highlighted issues around:
- Incomplete or unclear analytics
- Limited visibility into user behavior
- Data that exists… but doesn’t really help
And honestly, that’s a common problem.
Analytics dashboards often show numbers, but not answers.
The Solution (That I Clearly Remember)
Inspired by that half-forgotten article, I decided to build a new analytics website focused on:
- 📊 Clear, meaningful user analytics
- 🤖 AI-powered insights (not just raw data)
- ⚡ Developer-friendly dashboards
- 🧠 Insights that actually explain what’s happening and why
If analytics are supposed to help us make decisions, they should feel less like homework and more like guidance.
Current Status: Under Construction 🚧
The platform is still under active development.
Some features are live, some are evolving, and some are still arguing with my code editor.
⏳ Expected launch:
2–3 days (unless the analytics decide to analyze themselves)
Final Note
You can:
- Wait for it to go live
- Or forget this article… just like I forgot the original one
Either way, the goal is simple:
Build analytics that developers actually enjoy using.
See you soon with something real, measurable, and hopefully memorable.
(Unlike my memory.)
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