
Torevez
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PHP
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Torevez is an AI phone receptionist built for small HVAC contractors who can't always answer the phone. When a call goes unanswered, our voice assistant Ava picks up, talks naturally with the caller, captures their name, phone number, email, service address, and the issue with their system, then sends the owner an SMS with the lead details within seconds. Built for the 1 to 5 employee HVAC business where the owner is on a job, under a house, or on the roof and can't pick up. Every missed call is a lost job. Torevez catches them. Features:
24/7 AI phone answering Natural voice conversation, not a phone tree Readback confirmation on every detail (name, phone, email, address) Instant SMS lead delivery to the owner Self-correction detection (catches "wait, that's wrong" mid-answer) Verification flag when caller corrects info Setup in under 15 minutes $150/month founding rate, no per-minute charges
No long-term contract, no offshore call center, no menu to navigate. Just an AI that sounds like a real receptionist and never sleeps.
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Torevez's answer
HVAC owner-operators with 1 to 10 employees who answer their own phones. They're on roofs, in crawlspaces, or finishing estimates when calls come in. Every missed call is a customer about to call the next contractor on Google. They typically lose 30 to 40 percent of incoming calls and don't track how many turn into jobs that went to a competitor.
Torevez's answer
Three reasons. First, zero risk: you don't pay anything until the system catches you a paying job, no card on file at signup, no contracts. Second, HVAC-specific: the assistant is trained on HVAC call patterns including bilingual English and Spanish handling, not a generic chatbot retrofitted for the trades. Third, the founding pricing: $50 a month locked for life for the first five HVAC companies, half the standard rate forever. Most competitors charge $150 to $300 per month from day one with no proof it works for your specific business.
Torevez's answer
Torevez started after watching small HVAC contractors lose thousands of dollars a month from missed calls they didn't realize they were missing. Most existing receptionist services either charge enterprise prices small operators can't justify, or use generic AI chatbots that sound nothing like a real person and frustrate customers. I built Torevez specifically for HVAC owner-operators with a pay-only-when-it-works pricing model so contractors could try it without risk. Built by a solo founder, designed for the small shops the big software companies overlook.
Torevez's answer
Torevez is the only AI receptionist built specifically for HVAC contractors that charges nothing until it catches you a paying job. Most AI receptionists charge monthly subscriptions whether they produce results or not. Torevez aligns its pricing with whether the system actually makes you money. If it never catches a paying job, you never pay.
Torevez's answer
Python and FastAPI for the backend, PostgreSQL for the database, React for the frontend, Vapi for voice AI infrastructure, Twilio for SMS and voice telephony, Render for hosting, and Supabase for auth and realtime sync.
Based on our record, PHP seems to be more popular. It has been mentiond 56 times since March 2021. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
The PHP website is indeed one of the worst parts of the whole ecosystem. Just look at the landingpage (https://php.net) and compare it with those of other languages. There's not a single piece of PHP code on the page. No "what is PHP", no "why should I use it", and no "that's why PHP is great". It's just a news page showing the latest releases, and a small section for downloading PHP. And speaking of the website:... - Source: Hacker News / 2 months ago
My initial idea was to leverage the main applicationโs queue worker by deploying a queue worker remotely and setting up a secure connection between them using something like Wireguard. Vigilant is written in PHP using the Laravel framework, for queuing it uses Laravel Horizon. This is a queuing system built on top of Redis. All monitoring tasks in Vigilant are executed on this queue, it allows for multiple queues... - Source: dev.to / 8 months ago
I remember being 15 (18 years ago ๐ฅฒ) and learning PHP. Stack Overflow wasnโt as big yet, and finding answers often meant digging through forums filled with half-baked solutions, each dependent on specific hosting configurations. There was no universal standard, some hosts supported certain php.ini settings while others didnโt. The only reliable resource? The official PHP documentation: php.net. - Source: dev.to / over 1 year ago
That's the first I've heard of it, and I like it! I can't tell you the number of trips to php.net to look at argument order for a function. Is it haystack/needle, or needle/haystack? Of course it could turn into the same thing w/ argument names (is it whole_name or full_name?), but I'm going to use it. Source: about 3 years ago
Prepare to spend a fair bit of time reading and going back to phptherightway.com and php.net. I've also found this Tutorial from Envato Tuts+ to be quite good. Source: about 3 years ago
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