Software development

Post LinkedIn lead magnet · Software development

Claude now has 3 products. Chat. Cowork. Code. Here's how to work with them the right way. Most solo founders are doing one of two things: using Chat for everything and ignoring the other two, or jumping between all three randomly hoping something clicks. Both approaches leave value on the table. Here's what nobody explains clearly: these aren't three versions of the same thing. They're three different kinds of work. ➡️ Chat is where you think. Brainstorm, strategize, analyze, make decisions. It's a thinking partner. ➡️ Cowork is where work gets done. Real .docx, .pptx, .pdf files delivered to your desktop. No terminal. No code. You describe the outcome, it handles the execution. ➡️ Code is where things get built. Websites, tools, apps, infrastructure. The engineering department you don't have. When you see them as three kinds of work, the question changes. You stop asking "can Claude do this?" and start asking "which Claude does this?" That's a different question. And it's the one that unlocks all three. I made a one-page guide that maps every difference, organized by the questions solo founders actually ask, not technical feature lists. Want access? Connect with me, drop "GUIDE" in the comments, and I'll personally send it over.

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Connect with me, drop "GUIDE" in the comments, and I'll personally send it over.

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I built the same app with 4 AI's. Who built it best? Here are the results. The test: Build a client management dashboard for a digital agency. Using the exact same prompt for each. Ranking based on: > UI/Design > Logic & Functionality > Backend/Database > Ease of Use Let's break it down: Tool 1: Bolt ⏱️ Time: 10-15 min (slower) 🎨 Design: 6.5/10 - Basic, but functional ⚙️ Logic: 7/10 - Everything worked 🗄️ Backend: 8/10 - Seamless Supabase integration, built-in security scanner 🧭 Ease of use: 7.5/10 Solid all-around. Nothing flashy, nothing broken. Tool 2: Base44 ⏱️ Time: Few minutes 🎨 Design: 6.5/10 - Very "vibe coded" looking ⚙️ Logic: 7/10 - Did the job 🗄️ Backend: 8/10 - Auto-built Google auth which was nice 🧭 Ease of use: 6.5/10 - UI feels clunky The underdog. Works, but feels like it's playing catch-up on polish. Tool 3: Replit ⏱️ Time: 20-30 min 🎨 Design: 7.5/10 - Actually tried to match the reference ⚙️ Logic: 7/10 - Standard 🗄️ Backend: 6/10 - Confusing, hard to navigate 🧭 Ease of use: 3/10 One prompt and I hit usage limits. Couldn't even continue building. Brutal experience. Tool 4: Lovable ⏱️ Time: ~5 min (fastest) 🎨 Design: 7/10 - Cleanest, most polished ⚙️ Logic: 7.5/10 - Smart intuition (reminded me to create clients before projects) 🗄️Backend: 8/10 - Seamless with options 🧭 Ease of use: 9/10 Just works. Everything feels intuitive. Final rankings: 🥇 Lovable - Best overall experience 🥈 Bolt - Reliable second 🥉 Base44 - Needs polish 4️⃣ Replit - Stuck in no-man's land The truth? They're all using the same AI models. The difference is UX. Key takeaway: These tools live or die by ease of use. Replit is caught between "dev tool" and "no-code" - serving neither well. For non-technical builders: Lovable or Bolt. For technical folks: Just use Cursor. Full video breakdown on my channel. Comment "Ranking" for the link, or search on YT.

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