Update:
After a few days of using, I think if v0 can build up a serie of pages based on one common theme generated by AI, that would be awesome. For now, I have to adjust every page generated into a similar looking preference, not auto enough.
---
This can be useful for a side project's starting up. But, you can not get everything you want. e.g., prompt with "An AI styled login page". You'll just get yourself a trival one rather that a login page with amusing artifacts.
Pros: Easily provide neat designs without looking for a designer. (This overkills the Cons, 10 out of 10!)
Cons: Sometimes it just won't provide what you want. Also, it has UI dependencies, which may be bad if you have a specific UI preference. Plus, free users' production is public unless you pay.
The look of UI is good but React code is horrible. It doesn't utilize components and jsx maps, lots of repetition and junk. You basically need to rewrite everything to be production-viable.
Has helped me get from 0 to 1 really quick. I loved the NextJS dashboard tutorial that taught me experimental practices, such as partial pre-rendering.
I am using Vercel for some of my sites and it is truly fantastic, both in terms of management and simplicity. It manages to stay simple despite offering a lot of options.
Vercel cloud is a game changer for quick product validation and development. It provides plug-and-play deployment pipeliens for any Next.js project with sensible defaults. Things like automatic deployments, environment variables and deployment protection work out of the box without any tedious configuration. I recommend Vercel wholeheartedly for any solo developer or indie hacker.
This is genius, and i can't wait to use it.
I have two questions:
1- Will it support other frameworks later on.
2- How much would this cost approximately.