Limits & good to know A short, honest list of what to expect so nothing surprises you. Storage and files - Visitor uploads: each file has a size cap, and each project has a total storage allowance. If you expect large files (long videos, big datasets), mention it so your AI can plan around the limits. - Your own images and assets (logos, photos) share that per-project allowance. - Your Dashboard shows current usage. See Files & images for the difference between the two kinds. What onvibe is great at - Web pages and apps that collect, store, and display data. - Small-to-medium tools, dashboards, forms, galleries, and APIs. - Anything you want online quickly with a real link to share. What it's not built for - Heavy, large-scale systems (millions of users, huge media libraries, real-time games). - Long-running background jobs that churn for minutes — apps respond to requests as they come in. - Replacing a full custom infrastructure for a large business. It's for getting real, useful apps live fast. One honest caveat: complex front-end frameworks Most apps "just work" when you ask. A few advanced setups (certain large front-end frameworks that need a separate build step on your own computer) require your AI to have a local environment to build in. If you're using a chat-only assistant with no access to your computer, prefer a plain, straightforward app — your AI will steer you there, and the result is usually simpler anyway. If you don't know what this means, you almost certainly don't need to worry about it. Good habits - Save a version before big changes so you can undo — see Versions & undo. - Use a draft when your app already has real data — same page. - Be specific when something breaks — see When something breaks. - Start small. It's easier to grow a working app than to debug a giant first attempt.