Churro š„Ø #3 : This summer I became a ādigital carpenterā
In this new churro, I talk about how it came from messy drawers to a Product Hunt launch
No, I didnāt start carving wood in my garage (if youāve seen me with a hammer, you know why that would be a terrible idea).
What I did do was finally tackle one of those endless TODOs we all have: organizing the drawers at home full of cables, chargers, and random gadgets.
Halfway through the mission, I found my fourth identical cable, the exact same one I had bought again and again because I kept forgetting I already owned it. That was the moment I thought: ok, I need a better system.
At first, I opened a spreadsheet. Then I stopped and asked myself: Wait, why not build an app?
And thatās how Digital Drawer was born.
Hereās the thing: 20 years ago, turning an idea like that into something real would have required weeks (maybe months) of coding, design, and polishing. Today? With AI tools for coding, design, promotion, and copywriting, prototyping has never been easier.
Donāt get me wrong, engineering still matters. Security, scalability, and solid architecture are more important than ever. But when it comes to exploring an idea, the barrier to entry is so low now that even a clumsy wannabe carpenter like me can turn frustration into a product.
And hereās my experiment: today I launched Digital Drawer on Product Hunt š. Not just to show what I built, but to see if others might find it helpful too.
If youāve ever bought the same charger three times (donāt lie, weāve all done it), maybe this is for you. Reviews, votes, and feedback are more than welcome and come with a complimentary montadito of lomo en manteca for your visit to CĆ”diz ā¤ļø.
Let me tell you a few things Iām learning, thinking, failing at, or experimenting with lately:
Finance Meets AI (and the Gap in Between)
In AI, thereās still a big gap between the excitement of users and the reality of making it work every day.
This summer, riding the hype after Claude launched Claude Financials, Natalia (my partner and a Finance Director) and I started wondering what āfully embracing AIā looks like in the daily life of a financial specialist.
She jumped in with focus: using Claude to analyze and categorize our family expenses, generate reports, and even highlight improvements. The first week felt magical, beautiful graphs, shiny dashboards, all the sparks of AI. But the crash came quickly: buttons didnāt work, numbers were half-invented, context kept breaking, and every run produced a different result.
It was a reminder: without real guardrails, the gap between techies (who can code their way around limitations) and everyone else is still vast.
Now Natalia is learning Python basics to build that missing foundation, so the insights arenāt just shiny, but solid. Keep you posted about this.
The Power of Routine (especially for Creative Minds)
I think it was Stephen King who said the best writing tip is simple: sit down every morning, keep your ass on the chair, and wait for the ideas. (My brain is mashed potatoes, so maybe it wasnāt him, but Iām refusing to fact-check, because that line is gold.)
After summerākids, travels, friends, chaosāmy routine was gone. And only once I started getting it back could I set goals again and make a plan that actually worked.
Even if youāre a ācreative monsterā (Iām not, though my head is usually full of a thousand things), donāt underestimate the power of routine. We sometimes fall for the bohemian myth that inspiration should appear out of nowhere. But in my case, at least, the real ideas come from showing up (or showering up!) and working hard.
Whatās worth my time (and what should I automate)?
This summer, I picked up The Almanack of Naval Ravikant. I canāt say I connected with every page, but one idea stuck with me: Naval is obsessed with investing his time only in things that truly matterāactivities that can compound into more time, more freedom, or more value down the line.
Weāre living in this wild era of automation and AI, where so many things can be delegated to tools. Which means the real question isnāt what can I do? But whatās worth me doing myself?
And strangely, thatās connected to Digital Drawer. If Iām going to spend hours building something, I want it to come back to meāwhether in better experiences, saved headaches, or maybe even helping someone else solve the same problem.
A small musical obsession (and a tiny spoiler).
Lately, Iāve been kinda obsessed with a band called Turnstile. Their album has been on repeat for meāitās raw, explosive, and their live shows look incredible. Consider this my attempt to spread the curse.
By pure luck, Iāll catch them live in Seattle the same week Iāll be announcing my new adventure. And without saying too much⦠letās just say it has something to do with being a little more predictable in a world full of machines.
But thatās a story for another edition š.
Thatās all for nowāthanks for reading š«¶.
And hey, Iād love to hear your thoughts on my writing!
Drop me a comment, send me a message, give me energy! š



