
From breaking products as a QA… to trying to build ones people actually enjoy
Hey everyone 👋 I’ve spent most of my career as a QA engineer. My job was to find what’s broken. What doesn’t work. What might frustrate someone. Over time, you start seeing patterns. Not just bugs… but why products feel hard to use. A lot of things weren’t “broken” in a technical sense. They worked. But they felt: heavy confusing or just… tiring to use And that stuck with me. A while ago, a few of us decided to try something different. We started DyvenTech — not to build more apps, but to build ones that feel better to use. After ~1.5 years of learning, building, and iterating together, we shipped our first products. One of them is KeikoAI . It came from a simple frustration: Most journaling or mood apps ask you to log things… but never really give anything back. So we built something that: helps you see patterns in your own life suggests small, realistic experiments and focuses on clarity instead of motivation Another one is MicroWins . That came from a different problem: To-do lists
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