Explore Problems
Showing 2,188 of 4,732 problems · matching your filters
Developers Lack Real-Time Job Market Intelligence for DevOps Skill Trends
Engineers trying to prioritize which DevOps skills to learn have no reliable real-time view of what employers actually require, relying instead on outdated blog posts. The 399 upvotes on a community-built LinkedIn job scan dashboard confirm massive unmet demand for objective, data-driven skill trend intelligence.
Multiple Fine-Tuned ML Models Consume Excessive Memory on Budget VPS Infrastructure
Running several specialized fine-tuned models in parallel for ML pipelines creates prohibitive memory overhead on affordable VPS instances, limiting deployment options for cost-conscious developers. Model consolidation techniques reduce memory dramatically but require significant engineering effort to implement.
Developers Constantly Switch Between IDE and Observability Tools When Debugging
Debugging workflows require constant tab-switching between the code editor and external logging or observability platforms, breaking concentration and slowing incident resolution. Every context switch costs cognitive momentum and adds latency to finding root causes. Embedding live log streams directly in the IDE eliminates this friction for a task developers perform multiple times daily.
Frontend Development Blocked by Dependency on Unfinished Backend APIs
Frontend developers frequently cannot make progress while waiting for backend API endpoints to be built, creating coordination bottlenecks in team development workflows. Generating realistic mock endpoints from real API call patterns would allow parallel development without requiring the backend to be complete. This is a persistent friction point in any team with separated frontend and backend concerns.
Intercom Fin AI Agent Per-Resolution Pricing Becomes Prohibitively Expensive at Volume
Intercom's Fin AI support agent charges approximately $0.99 per resolved conversation, which compounds rapidly for businesses handling thousands of monthly support interactions. This per-resolution pricing model makes AI-assisted support economically unfeasible for high-volume or cost-sensitive businesses. The pricing structure creates a structural barrier to AI support adoption in the mid-market.
Carriers Refuse Defective Phone Replacement After 14-Day Return Window Expires
T-Mobile customers with phones defective from day one are denied replacement after the 14-day return window, even with documented issues reported repeatedly during the window. The gap between carrier and manufacturer warranty responsibility leaves consumers without recourse. Emergency call failures add a safety dimension that makes this more than a standard return dispute.
Online Car Dealers Install Safety-Hazard Components Without Disclosure
Online used car platforms install tires and components that are older or more degraded than the vehicle itself without disclosing this in vehicle condition reports. When customers flag these safety hazards, dealers refuse to remedy them citing as-is sale terms. Buyers have no independent verification mechanism before committing to purchase under online-only sales models.
Telecom Switch Promotions Systematically Not Honored After Sign-Up
Consumers switching telecom providers based on promotional commitments — lower rates, military discounts, device trade-in credits — routinely find none of the offers applied to their account. Monthly bills arrive at double the promised amount with no path to resolution. The gap between advertised and actual pricing is a structural consumer harm affecting millions of switchers annually.
Slack notification overload and channel sprawl degrade team focus
As Slack usage scales, teams accumulate redundant channels and face relentless notification volume with no effective native remedy. Workers struggle to know which channels matter and miss important messages in the noise. This is a structural problem that worsens as organizations grow, affecting productivity across virtually all Slack-using teams.
Auto repossession deficiency balances reported without UCC sale verification
Lenders report deficiency balances after vehicle repossession without documenting compliance with UCC Article 9 sale requirements, leaving consumers with unverifiable and potentially fabricated debt appearing on their credit reports.
Non-Technical Users Overpay for Basic PC Repairs Due to Knowledge Gap
Consumers without technical knowledge routinely pay $80-150 for professional repair visits to resolve issues that take experts minutes to diagnose and fix. The absence of accessible, personalized step-by-step guidance leaves non-technical users dependent on expensive in-person or remote support for problems that are objectively simple.
Non-Technical Users Overpay for Basic PC Repairs
Local computer repair shops consistently see customers paying $80-150 for issues that require only minutes of expert time, revealing a structural knowledge access gap. Non-technical users have no reliable way to self-diagnose or fix basic PC issues, making expensive professional intervention the default path even for trivial problems.
Freelancers lack affordable all-in-one PM, invoicing, and time tracking
Solo freelancers need PM, invoicing, and time tracking in one place but are priced out of team-oriented tools that bundle features they do not use. The alternative — stitching together free tiers across multiple apps — creates friction across the core billing workflow. There is no well-designed lightweight tool built specifically for the solo operator use case.
Remote workers lack virtual coworking spaces that combat isolation
Working from home is lonely and unstructured. People need virtual coworking environments with body doubling, task management, and community presence to stay productive. Existing tools separate focus from social connection.
UX evaluation lacks automated persona-based prototyping and testing tools
Product teams manually evaluate UX with real users which is slow and expensive; no tools automatically simulate diverse user personas to find usability issues before launch
Solo SaaS Builders Stall Near Completion Without Co-Founder or Collaborator
Indie developers frequently reach 70-90% project completion but lack complementary skills in marketing, design, or backend to ship. Finding trustworthy collaborators willing to work for equity or revenue share rather than cash is a persistent structural gap. Existing platforms like LinkedIn and co-founder networks are too generic for this specific need.
Home insurers cover cosmetic repairs but deny root-cause fixes, then cancel policies
When water damage occurs, insurers pay for interior remediation only — refusing to waterproof the foundation that caused the leak — leaving homeowners with a temporary fix and a recurring problem. The policy language creates a structural gap between what is covered and what constitutes a permanent repair. Insurers compound the harm by cancelling coverage when homeowners document the remediation work that was done.
Salesforce CRM overwhelming feature density drives user abandonment
Salesforce users consistently report feeling overwhelmed by the sheer number of functions, tabs, and options presented without clear hierarchy or guidance. The complexity gap between what most sales teams need and what the platform exposes creates adoption friction. This drives mid-market teams toward lighter CRM alternatives despite Salesforce's feature depth.
Abandoned Cloud Resources Silently Waste Budget Across Providers
Organizations accumulate orphaned cloud resources (stopped VMs, unattached disks, old snapshots) across AWS, Azure, and GCP that continue billing silently. Multi-cloud scanning tools that run locally in CI with configurable thresholds address a growing need.
Solopreneurs Cannot Compete Using Enterprise-Scale SaaS Products
Solopreneurs and freelancers are forced to use enterprise-grade SaaS tools designed for large teams. These tools have excessive features, complexity, and pricing that do not fit the needs of individuals or very small teams, creating an underserved market segment.