| Hi HN, I want to share a story that might resonate with anyone who has tried to launch an open-source project from zero visibility, zero budget, zero network. Seventy days ago I created a repo called WFGY. I had no prior followers, no launch partners, no ads. Today, it’s at 800 stars and counting. Pure cold start. The “secret”? Not marketing. Not tricks. It was building a Problem Map. --- #### What is a Problem Map? Instead of claiming my system “improves reasoning” or “solves RAG bugs,” I wrote down 16 concrete failure modes engineers hit every day: * Embedding drift (semantic ≠ vector closeness)
* Chunking collapse (half-sentence vs full chapter granularity mismatch)
* Versioning hallucinations (index v1 + v2 = ghost hybrid doc)
* Pre-deployment ingestion collapse
* Prompt injection bypasses
* … and 10 more, all documented. For each one I built a text-only “semantic firewall” module that fixes the issue without changing infra. Developers could see their exact bug listed, mapped, and patched. This gave the repo two things: 1. Immediate empathy — engineers recognized their pain points word-for-word.
2. Immediate usability — they could paste my TXT file, keep infra untouched, and the model stabilized. --- #### Why it mattered * It wasn’t a claim, it was a diagnostic mirror.
* People didn’t need to “believe” me — they could try the TXT in 60 seconds and watch bugs stop replicating.
* Instead of selling “AI magic,” I showed a surgical checklist. This is why strangers starred the repo. It wasn’t hype; it was problem → fix → proof. --- #### What’s next I’m now scaling this into something bigger: * The Problem Map will evolve into a Global Semantic Surgery Room — think of it like an AI hospital’s operating theater.
* Engineers bring in failure logs (RAG, OCR, planning drift).
* The system triages, diagnoses, and applies the right semantic patch in real time.
* Integrations are underway for n8n, Make, GoHighLevel and more — all unified under the same open Problem Map. Launch target: September 1. ### Closing I don’t see this as “my repo got stars.” I see it as proof that open source thrives when you solve pain with surgical precision. If you’ve ever tried to cold start, my suggestion: don’t sell a dream, map a nightmare. Engineers don’t trust hype — they trust a checklist that fixes the crash. Coming next: the Semantic Surgery Room and Global Fix Map (n8n, GHL, Make and more). Launching by Sep 1. |