HACKER Q&A
📣 thookipodu

Tech stack advice for a new website


Hello HN,

I have a budding idea to build a website in edtech space. my daughter will be the first user. If it works, I want to make it public. I have these questions

1) Should I have the website running in cloud from day one ? If yes, any thoughts/recommendations ? If no, what I can do now, make that change (which I think is eventual) seamless?

2) What is the recommended tech stack ? I am looking for an option that I can stick with (mostly) and not make and future drastic changes

If you have read so far, thank you !


  👤 joshxyz Accepted Answer ✓
1. yes, maybee you can share it to others who might have interest in using it

2. hn mantra, any tech stack you are comftable using as long as you can ship your product to your users fast

2cents


👤 dylanhassinger
next.js or php

👤 romanhn
First off, I don't think anyone can answer these questions for you. There are a ton of considerations that could influence the end result, and you haven't provided any context really, so any answers you get will reflect this. That said I'll give it a shot.

1. You'll likely get a bunch of opposing opinions here on HN, it's a divisive topic (which probably means you can go with either and be fine). That said, my recommendation would be to start with the cloud - tons of managed services out of the box, good default security, lots of resources, ease of experimentation and rolling back infra that didn't work out, etc. Look into serverless tech like Lambda to control costs.

2. Whatever you already know best. Unless you're looking to learn some specific tech. But if you're focused on delivery, underlying languages/frameworks matter vanishingly little.


👤 viginti_tres
htmx and flask/django

👤 jarl-ragnar
Elixir and Phoenix Liveview. It really is the most productive framework I’ve found.

👤 meowtimemania
I like SST.

I would do SST/node/htmx since that’s where I feel most comfortable/productive.


👤 matt_s
The approach here to answering your questions is to give you the easiest path towards making something.

1. Cloud hosting? No - buy the cheapest linux virtual server you can - like $5/month hosting. Cloud is most appropriate for variable compute needs (which edtech has) but you're not there yet. When you have scaling problems, solve scaling problems. Since you have a trial user at home you could build it out locally or use VPN tools to allow access to a server inside for the short term. Once you have a solid product, then figure out longer term hosting.

2. Tech Stack? Regarding your context - pick the tech stack you are quite comfortable with, its probably easiest to go with Python of the ones you listed since there is likely to be lots of docs on setting that up for a small hosting company once you get to that point.


👤 Jugurtha
>I am not trying to learn any new technology/framework. I am quite comfortable with Python/Java/Clojure/Javascript stack

And

>2. My time - I want to spend time on value creation.

You already have your answer: stick with the stack you know and focus on value creation and serving your VIP user.


👤 aregsar
Since you mentioned Python then you might consider Django with the DigitalOcean app platform https://docs.digitalocean.com/tutorials/app-deploy-django-ap...

👤 solardev
What exactly are you trying to run? The ideal stack really depends on your app, it's not a one size fits all question. Often there is a tradeoff between complexity and power, for example. Or ease of use vs ease of migration.

It might also be a good idea to investigate some of the existing edtech offerings (canvas, moodle, blackboard etc.) and see if it makes sense to either use a similar stack (if you want to run alongside them) or do something totally different (if you want heavy AJAX interactions, for example).