This is the exact resolution I needed for large projects. I'm using the bolt otto dev fork created by Cole and built out by the community. Are you by chance working on that project and can we incorporate this specific workflow into that fork of bolts because this would resolve the number one issue I think the majority of the community experiences with building actual real large full stack websites. Would you be able to go into full detail and make another video for individuals that are not computer savvy but want to learn
Thanks for your feedback! I'm not directly involved with the Otto dev fork, though I know Cole and the community's great work there. I focus on the official Bolt release since it receives updates and optimizations first, which helps me stay current with the latest capabilities. The workflow I demonstrated can be adapted to work with different versions of Bolt, including Otto dev. I'm developing an app that implements these principles, but I want to ensure it's well-tested before sharing more details. Regarding more beginner-friendly content - yes, I plan to create more videos aimed at people new to development! My goal is not just to show tools but to help people build foundational AI skills that they can apply across different platforms and tools, even as the technology evolves. Keep an eye on the channel for more tutorials geared towards beginners. And thanks for being part of this community! 🙌
Such a great video, these are the exact solutions I've needed. Bolt and cursor are amazing to work with, but it's been so tough to get a finalized, usable app from it. Your series is incredible, thank you!
Hey, thanks a lot! Your tutorials really inspire me, keep it up! Just one thing, can you try to keep the titles to the bottom side? They're a bit distracting when I'm trying to focus on your work flow 😊
Thanks so much for the kind words and helpful feedback! 😊 I'll definitely keep that in mind about the text placement - moving the titles to the bottom makes a lot of sense to avoid distracting from the main content. Really appreciate you taking the time to let me know. Hope you continue enjoying the tutorials!
Thank you! You make a great point about the token usage. You're right that Aider is more token-efficient. I actually only used Bolt for this specific part to showcase certain techniques (like the Github sync tool). I'll be covering Aider in Part 3, using it for targeted, precise code changes. Stay tuned!
Thank you for your feedback! You make a good point about the pacing. As the creator, I also noticed it turned out a bit faster than intended during editing. I'll keep this in mind for future videos and try to maintain a more beginner-friendly pace. Would you find it helpful to use the timestamps in the description for key points, so you can pause and review sections more easily?
@@AIDrivenCoder I viewed it a couple of times to figure out how to connect my github repo with bolt.new. However, it was a bit fast so I needed to look for other sources too. Anyways, the video was good in general! Keep it up!
This is the exact resolution I needed for large projects. I'm using the bolt otto dev fork created by Cole and built out by the community. Are you by chance working on that project and can we incorporate this specific workflow into that fork of bolts because this would resolve the number one issue I think the majority of the community experiences with building actual real large full stack websites. Would you be able to go into full detail and make another video for individuals that are not computer savvy but want to learn
Thanks for your feedback! I'm not directly involved with the Otto dev fork, though I know Cole and the community's great work there. I focus on the official Bolt release since it receives updates and optimizations first, which helps me stay current with the latest capabilities.
The workflow I demonstrated can be adapted to work with different versions of Bolt, including Otto dev. I'm developing an app that implements these principles, but I want to ensure it's well-tested before sharing more details.
Regarding more beginner-friendly content - yes, I plan to create more videos aimed at people new to development! My goal is not just to show tools but to help people build foundational AI skills that they can apply across different platforms and tools, even as the technology evolves.
Keep an eye on the channel for more tutorials geared towards beginners. And thanks for being part of this community! 🙌
Such a great video, these are the exact solutions I've needed. Bolt and cursor are amazing to work with, but it's been so tough to get a finalized, usable app from it. Your series is incredible, thank you!
I'm really glad to hear that you found the video helpful! Developing apps can be challenging, but you'll get there!
Brooooo this game changer for me! Thanks a ton waiting for part 2
I'm so glad to hear that! Part 2 is on the way, stay tuned!
Great video! Thanks for sharing this! Can't wait for part 2!
Thanks a ton! Can’t wait to drop part 2-it's gonna be epic! Stay tuned!
I found the local bolt version on Pinocchio is really doing better have you tried?
I haven't tried the local bolt version yet, but I'm definitely intrigued! Thanks for the recommendation!
Hey, thanks a lot! Your tutorials really inspire me, keep it up! Just one thing, can you try to keep the titles to the bottom side? They're a bit distracting when I'm trying to focus on your work flow 😊
Thanks so much for the kind words and helpful feedback! 😊 I'll definitely keep that in mind about the text placement - moving the titles to the bottom makes a lot of sense to avoid distracting from the main content. Really appreciate you taking the time to let me know. Hope you continue enjoying the tutorials!
Very good video. But bolt consumes a lot of tokens as compared to aider. Wouldn't it better to just use aider while design basic prototype in bolt?
Thank you! You make a great point about the token usage. You're right that Aider is more token-efficient. I actually only used Bolt for this specific part to showcase certain techniques (like the Github sync tool). I'll be covering Aider in Part 3, using it for targeted, precise code changes. Stay tuned!
This is a good video. But I think it is too fast for a beginner like me.
Thank you for your feedback! You make a good point about the pacing. As the creator, I also noticed it turned out a bit faster than intended during editing. I'll keep this in mind for future videos and try to maintain a more beginner-friendly pace. Would you find it helpful to use the timestamps in the description for key points, so you can pause and review sections more easily?
@@AIDrivenCoder I viewed it a couple of times to figure out how to connect my github repo with bolt.new. However, it was a bit fast so I needed to look for other sources too.
Anyways, the video was good in general! Keep it up!
Thanks for trying. This video covers the connection from Bolt to GitHub in more detail at a slower pace: ua-cam.com/video/vB6JUrqnUTo/v-deo.html
such banger 💥
That's really a great video
Thank you so much! I’m glad you enjoyed the video!
Will it work with the bolt.new fork?
I haven't tested the bolt.new fork but if it has the ability to download the zip file of the project, then I think so 🙂
@ the fork is much better. There are lots of updates on it. I appreciate your vidoes they are easy to understand.
Thanks for sharing and nice feedback! 🙏 I will definitely try the forked version soon.
What about using project IDX. The tool is 100% free. Google's AI IDE.
Thank you for the video.
Thanks! Project IDX is next on my list to explore - great suggestion! Stay tuned for a deep dive video on it soon!