Hi guys, I’m recently turned 18 years old, and I’m a UX/UI designer, currently working in a full-time position, and I have about 5~ free hours per week (on weekends only as full-time position takes all of my time).

I have experience in conducting various user research, interviews, competitor analysis, and I also managed to work on the interface for one AI Copilot for doctors.

I have no experience in building startups, however I would really like to get some.

So if anyone has a desire to work together, to invent and create something interesting, useful and perhaps unusual - I will be glad to have a conversation with you!

It is desirable that you have programming skills, so combining design from my side and programming from your side we can create a hgih quality MVP.

I wish everybody good luck, and successes!

  • leroy_twiggles@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    This is normally good advice but these people are often dangerous in this scenario because of the regulations involved.

    I’ve worked with many of these people - doctors and researchers and fundraisers with big dreams of technology solving a problem but zero clue of what is actually required to build and release such a product. These people all dramatically underestimate the amount of work it takes to build a regulated medical device.

    Traditional start-up types are the worst here. They all want to follow the traditional start-up advice and build a minimum viable product, launch early, and make big claims about what the product will do. That’s all great in a non-regulated industry. As a regulated medical device, those things might land you in prison for making false claims or releasing an unapproved device. That is not an exaggeration.

    Find someone who’s built and launched a successful, FDA-cleared medical device, or maybe someone from a pharmaceutical company who’s launched new drugs. They’re the ones who know what it takes.