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I feel like low-code apps like this have hit commodity level.

A bit of history - in the late 90s, you could (and we did) build a multi-million dollar product doing basic content management for plain old web pages. That heydey lasted a couple years before Wordpress and other such tools came around and basic CMS was more of a solved problem than a unique product.

The same has occurred over the years in multiple niches - a tool that would have been a terrific SaaS at one point gets built out, normalized, and well understood... to the point that it is no longer a unique value prop to just build a tool that solves problem X. You need to build the tool AND have some unique perspective and value prop that escalates it above all the others.

Low-code CRUD builders with DB integration and some basic workflow, reporting, and security now have hit that mark. There have always been big players in this market (Microsoft, IBM, Salesforce, etc.) It is good to see smaller players coming into their own in recent years, and this specific one is open source, which is a nice differentiator between it and many others.



For me the problem is that they usually don't reach a good maturity level, but the idea in my opinion is very important. To mention the 90s again, you could do in one day an internal app using MS Access. Now if you want it with web interface, you have to think about front-end, back-end, database, devops. It is just too much for when you want a simple thing.




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