I just shipped my first major update to a Chrome extension. Here's what I changed and why.
Building in public means being honest about mistakes. Here's one I made with Prompt Helix and how I fixed it in v1.0.2. Prompt Helix is a Chrome extension that extracts webpage content and sends it directly to your chosen AI. No copy-pasting. No tab switching. Click, ask, get an answer in context. I launched it in February and have been iterating since. The mistake I made with the free tier. When I launched I gave away too much for free. OpenAI and Claude completely free with no daily caps. It felt generous and user-friendly. In reality it meant there was no reason to ever create an account or pay. Someone could install it and use it every day forever without seeing a single upgrade prompt. Classic freemium mistake. I only realised this when I looked at my Clerk dashboard and saw 60 instal
Building in public means being honest about mistakes. Here's one I made with Prompt Helix and how I fixed it in v1.0.2.
Prompt Helix is a Chrome extension that extracts webpage content and sends it directly to your chosen AI. No copy-pasting. No tab switching. Click, ask, get an answer in context. I launched it in February and have been iterating since.
The mistake I made with the free tier.
When I launched I gave away too much for free. OpenAI and Claude completely free with no daily caps. It felt generous and user-friendly. In reality it meant there was no reason to ever create an account or pay. Someone could install it and use it every day forever without seeing a single upgrade prompt. Classic freemium mistake.
I only realised this when I looked at my Clerk dashboard and saw 60 installs but only 1 real signed up user. The extension works fine without an account. So nobody signed up.
What I shipped in v1.0.2.
Daily query limit of 25 for free users. This is the goldilocks number — casual users will never hit it, but someone using the extension as part of their daily workflow will within a week or two. When they hit it they see a friendly message and an upgrade prompt. That's the conversion moment that didn't exist before.
Usage counter shown subtly in the UI. Free users see "X queries remaining today" which turns amber at 10 and red at 5. Transparent, not aggressive. It creates awareness without being annoying.
Key Points moved to the free tier with a 5 per day cap. Previously it was Pro only. Moving it to free with a cap lets people experience the value before hitting a wall. That's a better conversion path than hiding it behind a paywall entirely.
Friendly restricted page message. Previously if you opened the extension on a Chrome Web Store page or new tab it would fail silently. New users thought it was broken and uninstalled. Now it shows "Prompt Helix can't read this page. Navigate to any website and try again." Simple fix, stops unnecessary uninstalls.
First time onboarding screen. Shows once on first install, explains the value before anything else, never shows again. Should improve the install to signup conversion rate.
What I learned from this update?
Freemium only works if there's a genuine wall somewhere. Generous free tiers feel good to build but kill conversion. The wall has to be real enough that power users hit it but gentle enough that casual users never feel restricted.
Silent failures are uninstall triggers. One confusing moment on first use and the extension is gone. Every edge case needs a human message not a blank screen.
Shipping beats perfecting. V1.0.2 still doesn't have PDF support or better extraction for Google Docs. Those are on the roadmap. But the conversion mechanics had to ship first because without them none of the other improvements matter.
If you're building a freemium Chrome extension I'd love to know how you approached the free to paid conversion. What's your query limit or usage cap equivalent?
ANY QUESTIONS OR COMMENTS ABOUT PROMPT HELIX PLEASE ASK. I READ ALL COMMENTS TO MY POSTS. HELP ME HELP YOU. HELIXLABS IS FOR THE COMMUNITY. FOR THE AI WORLD.
Check out Prompt Helix: chromewebstore.google.com/detail/prompt-helix/ffjppocigpeamhokbpnknlplkbccjpin
Website: helixlabs.studio
Sign in to highlight and annotate this article

Conversation starters
Daily AI Digest
Get the top 5 AI stories delivered to your inbox every morning.
More about
claudelaunchversion
60% of Consumers Want Approval Gates for AI Spending. Who Builds Them?
Visa just published a study of 2,000 consumers on AI agents and spending. The finding that should dominate every conversation about agentic commerce: 60% of respondents want human approval gates before an AI agent makes purchases on their behalf. Only 27% are comfortable with unlimited AI spending authority. Thirty-six percent say they would trust an AI agent backed by their bank. Twenty-eight percent would trust an independent agent. The paper's own summary: "Trust is the adoption switch." This is empirical confirmation of something that was structurally obvious. The infrastructure to move money is almost ready. The infrastructure to decide whether money should move does not exist. The asymmetry Two days ago, the x402 Foundation launched under the Linux Foundation. Twenty-two founding mem

Do You Actually Need an AI Gateway? (And When a Simple LLM Wrapper Isn't Enough)
I remember the early days of building LLM-powered tools. One OpenAI API key, one model, one team life was simple. I’d send a prompt, get a response, and move on. It worked. Fast. Fast forward a few months: three more teams wanted in, costs started climbing, and someone asked where the data was actually going. Then a provider went down for an hour, and suddenly swapping models wasn’t just a code change it was a nightmare. You might have experienced this too: a product manager asks why one team’s model is faster than another’s. Another developer points out that prompt injections have been slipping past reviews. Meanwhile, finance is asking for a monthly cost breakdown, and IT is questioning whether sensitive data is leaving the VPC. Suddenly, your “simple integration” is a tangle of spreadsh

Microsoft’s $10 Billion Japan Bet Shows the Next AI Battleground Is National Infrastructure
Microsoft’s decision to invest $10 billion in Japan between 2026 and 2029 looks like one of those stories that is easy to file under ‘big tech spends big again’. That would be a mistake. This is not just another data center expansion. It is a clear signal that the next phase of the AI race is shifting away from flashy model launches and toward something much harder to copy: national-scale infrastructure, workforce readiness, and cyber resilience. According to Reuters and follow-on reporting from Bloomberg and The Japan Times, the package is aimed at expanding AI infrastructure in Japan, deepening cybersecurity cooperation with the government, and supporting large-scale skills development. That combination matters. Microsoft is not merely selling cloud capacity into an attractive market. It
Knowledge Map
Connected Articles — Knowledge Graph
This article is connected to other articles through shared AI topics and tags.
More in Releases

Linear Space Streaming Lower Bounds for Approximating CSPs
arXiv:2106.13078v4 Announce Type: replace-cross Abstract: We consider the approximability of constraint satisfaction problems in the streaming setting. For every constraint satisfaction problem (CSP) on $n$ variables taking values in $\{0,\ldots,q-1\}$, we prove that improving over the trivial approximability by a factor of $q$ requires $\Omega(n)$ space even on instances with $O(n)$ constraints. We also identify a broad subclass of problems for which any improvement over the trivial approximability requires $\Omega(n)$ space. The key technical core is an optimal, $q^{-(k-1)}$-inapproximability for the Max $k$-LIN-$\bmod\; q$ problem, which is the Max CSP problem where every constraint is given by a system of $k-1$ linear equations $\bmod\; q$ over $k$ variables. Our work builds on and ext

Faraday Future Announces Its Latest Robot, the FX Aegis Quadruped, has Completed Its Full Compliance Certification in the United States - StreetInsider
Faraday Future Announces Its Latest Robot, the FX Aegis Quadruped, has Completed Its Full Compliance Certification in the United States StreetInsider




Discussion
Sign in to join the discussion
No comments yet — be the first to share your thoughts!