Stop Googling the same bug
twice.
Nine connected Notion databases for the bugs, AI conversations, and tech decisions you keep losing. Built for developers, not productivity influencers.
Lifetime access · Notion duplicate link · Going to $29 at 50 sales

You've fixed this before.
You've fixed this CORS error before. You know you have. But the Stack Overflow tab is long gone, the ChatGPT conversation is buried, and now you're spending 40 minutes re-solving a problem you already solved.
Sound familiar? Try these:
- You had a great Claude conversation that generated the exact regex pattern you needed. Gone.
- You chose Clerk over Auth0 six months ago. Someone asks why. You can't remember.
- That Stripe webhook gotcha that isn't in the docs — the one that cost you 3 hours — is about to cost you 3 hours again.
- You learned about
structuredClone()last month. You've already forgotten it exists.
The problem isn't that you don't learn enough. It's that you have nowhere to put what you learn.
Bookmarks don't work. Notes apps become graveyards. And your brain wasn't designed to be a database.
StackMind is your database.
Nine Notion databases, connected through relations, designed around the specific types of knowledge developers lose track of every day.
Log a bug fix in 30 seconds. Find it in 5 seconds, six months from now.
No PARA method. No habit tracker. No “build your second brain in 12 weeks” course. Just a working system, pre-built, with example entries already in the boxes so you can see how it works before adding your own.
9 databases · 45+ views· 30 example entries

Nine databases.
Each one designed around how a specific type of developer knowledge actually flows.
Bug Solutions
Problem, severity, technology, time-to-solve, source link. Every bug becomes a searchable entry. Sort by tech, severity, or how long it took you — and start spotting patterns in your own debugging.
AI Solutions
ChatGPT, Claude, v0.dev, Cursor — saved with the prompt, the response, the AI tool, the conversation link, and a category. Mark the best ones as Favorites so you stop rewriting them.
Code Snippet
Snippets organized by language and framework. Dual source tracking — where you found it and where the code lives (Gist, repo, local). Last-used and last-reviewed dates so stale snippets surface for cleanup.
Notes
The daily TIL database. Quick notes on the small things you learn — a flag, a method, a quirk — linked to the project and domain where you ran into them. Light schema, fast capture.
Domains
The connective tissue. Each domain — “E-commerce Platform,” “Internal Billing Service,” “Auth System” — links to its bugs, snippets, prompts, notes, and resources. Tracks tech stack, status, team, and repository.
Skills
What you’re learning, with skill level (learning / competent / expert) and priority (focus now / next up / someday). Last-practiced date so neglected skills resurface.
Projects
Side projects, work projects, learning projects. Status, progress, priority, deadlines, tech stack, repo and demo URLs. Linked to the bugs, snippets, and AI conversations the project produced.
Resources
Books, courses, articles, videos, repos, docs. Status (Saved / Learning / Completed), rating, type. The thing that finally turns ‘I should read this’ into ‘I read this.’
Tech Stack Decisions
Lightweight architecture decision records. The decision, the category, the context behind it, the date, and the project it applies to. When someone asks “why Tailwind?” six months from now, you have the actual answer.
Everything connects.
This isn't nine separate databases. It's a knowledge graph.
Your bug links to a project. That project links to a domain. That domain connects to your code snippets, your notes, your AI conversations, and your learning resources.
The relations between databases mean you never have to manually organize. Log things as you go — the structure builds itself.
Capture is cheap. Retrieval is free.
Two minutes to start.
The blank version always looks pointless. The version with one of your bugs in it suddenly looks useful.
- 01
Duplicate it.
One click in Notion. Five seconds.
- 02
Open the Start Here page.
A two-minute walkthrough of the dashboard. Pre-loaded with example entries so you can see what filled-out databases look like before adding your own.
- 03
Log one thing.
Open Bug Solutions and log the most recent bug you fixed. Or paste a Claude conversation into AI Solutions. Or write one Note. Doesn't matter which — pick the one that's freshest.
- 04
That's it.
You're using it. Come back tomorrow and add one more thing. Do that for two weeks and you'll wonder how you ever worked without it.
Built by a developer.
I built StackMind because I was tired of fixing the same CORS error three times a year, losing great Claude conversations, and forgetting why I picked Clerk over Auth0 six months ago.
I'm a developer, not a productivity influencer. I built this because I needed it. The whole template is generated programmatically using Python and the Notion API — I'll write up the build story on the blog if you're curious. Either way, this is the first thing I'm shipping in this space. There will be more.
One price. Yours forever.
Launch price. Going to $29 once I hit 50 sales.
- 9 connected databases
- Cross-database relations
- 45+ pre-built views
- 3 sub-dashboards (Dev Space, Debug Hub, Knowledge Base)
- Quick Capture buttons on the dashboard
- 30 pre-loaded example entries
- StackMind Walkthrough activation guide
- Custom templates for every database
- Weekly review checklist
- Archive page
- Lifetime updates
- Works on Notion free plan
Instant delivery · Lifetime updates · 14-day refund
Questions you might have.
Is this just another second brain template?
Notion has 314+ second brain templates. Most are PARA-based life organizers with a tasks database and a notes database. StackMind is built specifically for developer knowledge — it has databases for AI conversations, code snippets, bug solutions, and tech decisions that don't exist in general-purpose templates.
I already have a Notion setup. Is it worth switching?
If your current system has a dedicated place for bug solutions, AI conversations, and tech decisions — with relations connecting them — keep what you have. If your setup is a collection of disconnected pages and you can't find what you saved last month, StackMind gives you the structure you're missing.
$19 for a Notion template?
One re-Googled bug fix pays for it. And if it's not for you, you have 14 days to get a full refund — no questions asked.
Can I customize it?
It's Notion. You can change anything — rename databases, add properties, delete what you don't need, rearrange the dashboard. The template gives you a strong starting point, not a rigid system.
What if I only code in one language or framework?
The databases use multi-select properties for languages, frameworks, and tech stacks. Delete the ones you don't use. Works whether you're a React specialist or a full-stack generalist.
Does it work on Notion's free plan?
Yes. Everything in StackMind works on Notion's free plan. No Plus subscription needed.
Do I get updates?
Yes. New databases, views, or features all roll out for free to existing buyers. Update instructions get emailed to your Gumroad address.
What if I don't like it?
Email me within 14 days and I'll refund you. No questions, no forms.
How is this delivered?
Notion duplicate link, sent to your email instantly after purchase. Click “Duplicate” in the top-right of the linked Notion page and it's in your workspace. Yours forever.
I have a question that isn't here.
Email me — I respond within 24 hours. (This is my real inbox, not a support queue.)
Stop Googling the same bug twice.
Two minutes to set up. Six months from now, you'll wonder how you worked without it.
Lifetime access · Lifetime updates · 14-day refund
Get notified when I ship something new.
I'm a developer building tools for developers. StackMind is the first. There will be more — bigger things, different shapes. About one email a month, only when there's something real to show. No marketing newsletter nonsense.
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