btw, i was online but didn't get your message when it was sent. I received it just now, so keep in mind stack overflow doesn't send the notifications instantly (they probably batch them, for performance)...
the biggest problem with them is they have very high specificity (so you can't override them without !important and you also can't specify inline style responsively
also, if you want to make them wrap on mobile, you have to add in flex-wrap: wrap to the parent on the desired interval
i'll update in a sec. i need more hands :D
refresh it now
one more thing: when you develop with bootstrap, the first thing you want to do when you're trying to do something is go through docs and see if you find anything that's close to what you want
in your case: https://getbootstrap.com/docs/4.5/components/card/#card-layout card layout utilities
most times, it's way easier to copy/paste their markup and add in some styles to adjust
card deck does work: https://jsfiddle.net/websiter/ukr6jf2v/5/ but it's not responsive. in order to make it responsive, you have to wrap the cards into a `.row > .col` grid
typically, just an idea is kind of worthless. it needs a lot more than just the idea. a lot of work, from a lot of skilled people. and it still might not be enough
now, if you really believe in it and you think it's going to make good money, your best bet is to wrap it up as a business proposal, with costs and everything and pitch it to an investor
but you need at least a world class coder, a designer and a product owner. i don't know anyone who's decent in all three
as a coder, considering the times we live in, most times you're better off just coding for money, other people's ideas. admittedly, it's not going to make you millions, but it's gonna make you 100k/year, if you're decent
i thought it's impossible for me to learn it. had headaches trying to understand more complex patterns. i would have done anything sleep, get sick, anything, but couldn't stay focused on it more than 2 hours without a break
i practiced architecture until 2008. that's what i studied
at the crash, there was nothing to do for architects. civil engineers, everything was dead. so nothing to do for more than 4 years :)
anyways, the point i was making is that you just need to care about putting one step in front of the other. the mountain will remain behind at some point, sooner than you might think