That's my dream!
That's where I want to take this project.
At the moment, my focus is on what I can do by aggregating and analyzing the available data. Extracting ingredients, normalizing them, normalizing quantities across every supplement, etc. This has already proven to be a lot bigger undertaking than I could have imagined at the beginning of this journey. I had learn a lot about databases, scraping, LLMs, and evals. But it has been a tremendously fun (if sometimes overwhelming) journey.
First, I need to figure out how to monetize what I've built so far. And maybe I cannot, in which case I will start over. But I am trying to find my niche that people uniquely value. So far I found that there are is a pull from people chasing deals (e.g. finding products containing specific ingredients with the highest price per mcg) and people seeking for niche ingredients. This is not exactly the target audience I had in mind when building this, but I am glad they are finding value.
Evolving into performing actual lab tests and producing our own high-quality supplements is my dream.
I did something like this, pre LLM, except with food additives.While I dont have the technical expertise to fully evaulate what these substances are, and do, in many cases they are banned in some juristictions, and often have exceptionaly dubious reasons for bieng put in food, I did notice one very stark thing, in that not one single food aditive has ever been held up as " WOW! this stuff is so good!, a boon and benifit, etc, whatever" nothing, zero substances acclaimed as unequivical benifit to humanity.
I eat only food now.
Oh, and one more thing, many of these things are "white crystaline" substances, which means they are 100% concentrated things that are never found in actual foods,
think sugar.
Doesn’t that kind of exist already across a couple sites? Thinking consumer labs does this across lots of supplement categories. I have seen a few others too.
Consumer Labs is definitely the furthest ahead compared to everyone else. I've been using them for many years now.
Sounds expensive to test every podunk brand on Amazon. Maybe just the big brands that claim to be accurate like Bryan Johnson's Blueprint.