[HN Gopher] Ask HN: What are you working on?
___________________________________________________________________
Ask HN: What are you working on?
Hi HN, I'm curious to see what cool things everyone's building.
What side projects are you developing? What are you applying to HN
with?
Author : dvt
Score : 79 points
Date : 2021-01-14 21:50 UTC (1 hours ago)
| RickS wrote:
| At home: Experimental tools that connect max/msp(ableton) and
| arduino (LED control).
|
| Think highly general max patches that automatically export
| realtime audio, midi, and automation data to a central hub, with
| a GUI that allows you to assign that data to visual properties
| that are then sent to a neat LED setup I've built. Akin to the
| mod table in a synthesizer like serum/thor, but with all of
| ableton's data on one side, and a light show on the other.
|
| I started building this in react out of familiarity, and because
| I really want the visual feedback, but this has introduced 100ms+
| of round trip latency, which is enough to break the effect. It
| has to go max -> JS runtime within max -> socket.io listener ->
| react app -> listener -> arduino, which is goofy as hell. Trying
| to figure out a lighter, faster stack for this without having to
| learn both a new language and domain in tandem.
|
| I'd love examples of projects in this space, if anyone has
| favorites.
|
| At work: A GUI/IDE/DSL for cross platform design system
| management, to service one of the largest design systems in the
| world.
|
| We (Adobe) are about to start hiring an additional technologist
| to work on this. Potentially relevant experience: typescript,
| cross-platform UI dev, building version control systems, graph
| DBs?, visual programming (scratch, nodebased, etc), anything
| related to IDE dev or expansive config management tooling. That's
| off the top of my head, don't take the list too seriously. My
| email is psteele@, feel free to drop a line and I'll hang onto
| your info, but won't promise anything beyond a "we'll see in a
| bit". I'm not the hiring manager, just the primary IC.
| dceddia wrote:
| I'm making a video editor that removes silence from videos. After
| creating a bunch of code screencasts, I've found most of my
| editing time is spent manually cutting out chunks of silence, and
| it's always felt like a job the computer should be doing.
|
| So I'm making a native Mac app to do it for me. It's in private
| beta right now, and feedback has been good so far!
|
| I'm hoping to hoping to get it launched in the next few weeks.
| Aiming for a minimal useful feature set initially - recording the
| screen, removing silence, and exporting (either an edited video,
| or the timeline of cuts, to enable editing in
| Resolve/Premiere/ScreenFlow), and I'll build up from there.
|
| https://getrecut.com
| corytheboyd wrote:
| A near real-time peer-to-peer piano keyboard visualizer for
| remote music lessons. Peer 1 plays their keyboard, and the midi
| data is sent to Peer 2 where a keyboard animates and sound
| optionally plays.
|
| Got the idea after starting piano lessons about 5 months ago.
| It's all over zoom, which works surprisingly well for music
| lessons on its own, but it's difficult rigging a camera to show
| the remote person what you're doing on the keyboard, as well as
| getting the sound to come through (if you don't have a nice audio
| interface). There is still the issue of communicating finger
| position, not quite sure how to solve that one yet, or if it
| really even warrants a technical solution (again, you also have
| zoom to just communicate verbally, works okay for fingering)
|
| The keyboard I use to animate playback is a 3D model which
| communicates the flow of playback surprisingly well, it's at
| least a pretty cool accomplishment on its own!
|
| I'll launch it with a Show HN one of these days, within a month
| or two is the goal!
| krmmalik wrote:
| I'm working on building an app via smart contracts that helps
| people do Qirad. Qirad is finance without collateral or equity
| stake. It was instrumental in helping to create a flourishing
| economy during the Italian Renaissance but has since been
| forgotten.
|
| I'm a non-coder that's currently learning DAML and React.
| twiclo wrote:
| Me and a friend have been working on a game that I describe as
| "Factorio but for programming". Essentially you're an AI who's
| mission is to mine every resource from a planet. To keep things
| efficient you start out small and have limited processing power.
| You're only able to run an assembly like language that we've
| developed. As you get more resources you can research new things
| like functions, variables, type arguments, whatever. We plan for
| there to be a tech tree so you can choose to build out a language
| that's not strict similar to JS or you can go the try hard route
| and build something like Haskell. You build bots that mine,
| explore, hunt, etc and each bot is a computer running their own
| script. We plan on there being battles you have to script around
| and even things like setting up your own network so you can have
| robots call home when they're out in the field.
|
| I still need to think of a good name for it though.
| myartsev wrote:
| This is intriguing! Do you have a website / mailinglist / etc
| for those wanting to follow along?
| koeng wrote:
| Got a link or website? Sounds like a fun game.
| danaliv wrote:
| I designed and built an airport weather sensor network. Output is
| available here: https://davidsen.aero/awas/kgbr/
|
| (Still working on vis, sky condition, and present weather.)
|
| As you can see by some missing data on the graphs, it's not
| always available. But the sensors are carefully selected to
| perform to FAA standards. It's been really fun putting together a
| high-precision, distributed system (packet radio data links) that
| can withstand the outdoors.
| willmeyers wrote:
| I'm making a job board for local businesses to post listings as
| well as for people to find jobs working for small businesses.
| It's mainly for a portfolio piece, but I'm having fun making it.
|
| I'm also going through and implementing this paper
| https://arxiv.org/pdf/2005.06610.pdf
| bambax wrote:
| I've spent the last two weeks making an Arduino-based "air" MIDI
| controller. Kind of like a theremin but with cheap sonar modules
| (distance sensors like they use on toy cars).
|
| It's incredibly fun to play. It's not accurate enough to control
| a pitch with precision but for a controller, to drive filters,
| modulators, etc. it's perfect.
|
| Also, my kids love to play with it -- not in a "musical" way but
| to control the music while they dance. It's a way of using it I
| hadn't anticipated and it's super nice to see them do it.
| AlwaysBCoding wrote:
| this sounds cool, do you have a video of it somewhere?
| bambax wrote:
| Not yet, no but I will! ;-)
| hoten wrote:
| A few months ago I spent a week of my vacation reverse
| engineering Zelda Classic[1], an awesome tool made by Zelda fans
| which has many awesome custom-made Zelda-like games made in it.
|
| I'm a web guy, so that's my medium of choice. I called it Quest
| Maker[2].
|
| The game repo isn't public (haven't figured out what I want to do
| with this...), but here's the tool I made for converting the
| binary quest datafiles to JSON[3].
|
| Particularly interesting to me was extracting the sound data from
| the datafile to recreate a MIDI file, and then using a WASM
| library to play it in on the web.
|
| There is also a gnarly encoding to the datafile, so I had to
| compile the Zelda Classic datafile loading code and employ cython
| so the bytes aren't just gibberish.
|
| [1] https://www.zeldaclassic.com/
|
| [2] https://hoten.cc/quest-maker/play/
|
| [3] https://github.com/connorjclark/zquest-data
| flixic wrote:
| "Obsessively private messaging app", that will be available at
| silent.app. In many ways a LOT more secure (and much less user
| friendly, alas) than Signal. I expect that maybe 3 people in the
| world will need that. If you're interested, reach out to me, I
| have a private alpha available.
| crazypython wrote:
| A multiplayer browser game with a fresh start every time, that's
| easy to learn and easy to start having fun, doesn't guilt you
| into playing (healthy long-term relationship with the player),
| and has lots of replay value: http://vnav.io
|
| Last time we got feedback from HN:
| https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=25704597
| 13415 wrote:
| A virtual 80s supercomputing Lisp machine from a parallel
| universe, including hi res graphics, P2P-based "Z3S5 Net" with
| its own markup and browser, and a comprehensive help system:
|
| https://z3s5.com/
|
| The machine and its Z3S5 Lisp are working fine, but the page is
| just a placeholder for now. There is nothing to download yet.
| seism wrote:
| Tools for campaigns to improve the urban experience through
| crowdsourcing, ML & HCD.
| xrisk wrote:
| Reading a bunch of computational social science papers and trying
| to figure out whether pivoting into social science halfway
| through a CS degree was a wise choice :)
|
| In general: trying to figure out if academia is worth it or
| whether I should go join a startup afterwards :P
| ihinsdale wrote:
| An app for sharing and discovering culture of all kinds (creative
| works, events, and places): Giraf (https://giraf.app)
| jacques_chester wrote:
| Current main side project is a website, "Theory of Predictable
| Software". I want to try and pull together a lot of threads of
| thought I've had piling up over the past few years: engineering
| psychology, microeconomics with specific focus on public goods,
| collective action problems and institutional economics generally,
| statistical process and quality control, systems dynamics and
| bunch of other buzzwords worthy of tweet-bragging.
|
| So expect that to land any century now.
| tjkrusinski wrote:
| A file receiving service. I edit videos and more often than not,
| people don't have space in their dropbox or google drive to send
| me large files.
|
| Madry let's me send people a web page that they can upload files
| to. I pay for the storage, they don't need an account.
|
| https://madry.app
| h3rald wrote:
| These days I keep tinkering with min (https://min-lang.org). It
| is a small but fairly batteries-included concatenative
| programming language I've been working on for years.
|
| Not many people use it of course, and it's not going to ever
| become mainstream, but I am using it everyday to perform small
| tasks and also more recently even to build small APIs for other
| personal projects. Plus I find that working on your own
| programming language is a very rewarding experience, and it
| stimulates creative thinking.
|
| I actually go through phases... I have a few open source projects
| I keep coming back to every few months to fix issues, add small
| (or big) features, tweaks etc. the most notable ones are listed
| on my personal page (https://cevasco.org) -- it almost feels like
| I have my own very quirky and opinionated software ecosystem :)
| [deleted]
| laurent123456 wrote:
| I'm trying to get Joplin Server[0] to production-ready status.
| Mostly doing a lot of refactoring to clean up the code and add
| test units at the moment, and learning how to best package and
| distribute a server using Docker.
|
| 0: https://github.com/laurent22/joplin
| polote wrote:
| A knowledge managment software, much better than Jira, Notion and
| alike. As being a knowledge base will be the only goal!
|
| Let me know if you want to be notified when released
| RubenvanE wrote:
| I'm building some projects to slow the internet down.
|
| 1. A less addictive Hacker News (https://hackerdaily.io)
|
| 2. A brief overview of yesterday's world events
| (https://abriefoverviewofyesterday.com)
| masonhipp wrote:
| I'm working on a game builder to make remote team events more fun
| -- imagine a trivia or Jackbox-style game customized specifically
| for your company or team. The UI is mirrored after a
| presentation/slide builder (e.g. Powerpoint) but you can add all
| sorts of deeper interactions like multiple choice questions,
| vote-for-your-favorite-answer games, and even image uploads.
|
| It's called Slides with Friends: https://slideswith.com
|
| As you might expect this started as a pandemic side project, but
| it's since turned into a full-fledged company and we've had lots
| of demand to solve the very real and very difficult problem of
| creating team connection/cohesion remotely.
|
| Message me if you're interested in this space, I'd love to talk!
| jsherer wrote:
| I'm working on the next version of JS8Call[1], a digital mode for
| amateur radio, that enhances the mode by using some of the latest
| RF research (LTE/5GNR/Turbo Codes/Polar Coding) for sending
| reliable messages over weak signals/links.
|
| [1]: http://js8call.com/
| fwsgonzo wrote:
| I am working on ultra-low latency emulation. I have a RISC-V
| emulator (https://github.com/fwsGonzo/libriscv) that I am
| creating to fork itself really fast and use almost no working
| memory. Programs can make do with 64kb memory, which includes the
| emulator itself and everything it uses.
|
| https://cloud.nwcs.no/index.php/s/iP6aYJaoBtXbbqM
|
| Those measurements are from a production environment, meaning
| these numbers are very real! In a synthetic benchmark the fork
| happens at just ~200 nanoseconds, and it's really a meaningless
| number.
| rafaelturk wrote:
| Instant Payments Pix[1] & Fed Now[2]
|
| -[1] https://openpix.com.br/ -[2] http://openfednow.com/
| momothereal wrote:
| A social media website for music enthusiasts. Not the first to
| build this, but we (1 software dev and 1 graphic designer) hope
| to bring something new to the table that other sites like
| Last.fm, RYM and Reddit don't. We have 3,500 users and gaining
| about a dozen per day. ~300 DAU and ~1500 MAU.
|
| Right now you can sign up and connect your Spotify account. It
| will automatically record your listening history to build a music
| profile, which we'll expand on in the future. You can add people
| as friends, comment on other people's profiles. We're working on
| supporting other streaming services and building a reliable
| revenue model.
|
| https://wavy.fm
| outcoldman wrote:
| I have decided to work this year more on the macOS applications,
| started with the tools I always wanted and use all the time.
|
| Pretty proud of building a true Open Links, Mails, Files in any
| apps application, that just combines all the features you need in
| one.
|
| So right now working on the update. SwiftUI can be annoying, but
| adding support for TouchBar, better keyboard navigation, and more
|
| https://loshadki.app/openin/
| marktolson wrote:
| A minimalistic web host that supports serverless functions. Just
| create an account and you have an entire sub domain to work
| freely in. No projects, no deployments, no git, no cli, just
| create files, folders / routes and functions and away you go.
| StriverGuy wrote:
| Trying really hard to scale a newsletter/resource/community site
| in the startup space with a former colleague of mine. Some of you
| may have seen it around here already:
| https://boringstartupstuff.com.
| maxmcd wrote:
| An alternative to Nix that uses Starlark (python syntax) instead
| of a purely functional programming language:
| https://github.com/maxmcd/bramble
|
| I struggled to climb the steep learning curve of Nix/NixOS and
| wondered what it would be like with a more familiar (to me)
| syntax.
|
| It's been very rewarding to write. I was able to implement some
| ideas from the initial Nix paper that aren't present in Nix. Nix
| is also quite dependent on the use of the /nix/store path, but I
| was able to allow a user to use almost any path for their build
| store without sacrificing on the potential for a shared build
| cache. I also want to have - better native
| support for things like building docker images - better
| dependency management - no build daemon - etc...
|
| I'm currently implementing sandboxing and finalizing some of the
| build structure, but hoping it'll be usable sometime soon.
| Kaze404 wrote:
| I'm making a web app that aims to aid people in crafting on the
| game Final Fantasy XIV. I wrote a small piece about it here:
| https://leite.dev/posts/manipulation-app/
| harrisreynolds wrote:
| I've been working on WeBase [1] for a year now and am happy with
| how the platform is coming along.
|
| It is a No-code platform for building web applications without
| writing code. This space is starting to get crowded but there are
| still relatively few solutions that allow you to create custom
| data models AND custom views/web pages etc. Most tools do one or
| the other but not both.
|
| WeBase does reasonably well at both. Plus now we can deploy No-
| code apps to Netlify to give users global infrastructure with a
| really easy tool to build with.
|
| Check it out! :-)
|
| [1] https://www.webase.com
| r34 wrote:
| I'm working on a Polish dictionary. There are already
| professional dictionaries online but I miss one feature: to be
| able to search in definitions. It's also scrabble oriented, so
| words come with anagrams and so on.
| franze wrote:
| _ https://share.securrr.app/ secure document sharing for mobile
| devices
| xwdv wrote:
| Still tinkering with a static blog generator.
| roboben wrote:
| https://permapeople.org
|
| A platform consisting of a plant database, marketplace and (soon)
| a garden planner and log to research, grow, harvest, trade
| surplus and share knowledge.
|
| If you are into growing plants for food and other human use and
| doing this in a regenerative way (for example with Permaculture
| principles) then you should check it out.
|
| Currently working on a concept for the MVP for the garden
| planner.
| gyanamo wrote:
| building a platform/brand where artists can transform their work
| into apparel, and earn a fair share!: museema.com
| megzh wrote:
| Building a URL shortener that looks to do a lot more than the
| current offerings. I've found it a solid way to use old/random
| domains I've had and keep shared content up-to-date. Its live at
| https://fixed.link/ - I'd love feedback (its free to use, even
| without a registered account).
| th33ngineer wrote:
| A C++ implementation of minesweeper (with no assets except for
| the font used for the numbers). I've been writing C++
| professionally for 4 years now but I'm looking to familiarize
| myself with parts of the language I haven't used before.
| talkinghead wrote:
| https://www.oceanwaves.io
|
| make beats with friends in your web browser
| arendtio wrote:
| Looks awesome.
|
| I wish there were strings and trumpets available.
| talkinghead wrote:
| thanks! will add some string and trumpet samples just for
| you.
|
| been plenty of iterations over the past year or so, has been
| p cool to see people jamming on it between all corners of the
| world during the lockdown(s)
|
| hope they danced
| gvido wrote:
| I'm working for a browser-based app for electronic musicians to
| jam together online (not real-time, I think I found a compromise)
|
| Funny how I didn't anticipate that the biggest obstacles to
| launching it will be my own mind, in the form of imposter
| syndrome and insecurity. That, and the lockdowns have been a bit
| rough. Almost there though, and a lot of lessons learned. I
| assume there's probably some more lessons in actually getting the
| first users coming up next, but I'll cross that bridge when I get
| there I guess :)
| stevenschmatz wrote:
| I've been wanting this for YEARS. Can I be a beta tester? :)
| seism wrote:
| +1 to the idea, and the obstacles, which I deeply sympathise
| with. You've got a couple of potential users here already. Rock
| on!
| jeppesen-io wrote:
| Spend the week to learn and build my Nix[OS] environments for
| full time use. Nix on my Macbook and NixOS on my Asus G14
|
| https://github.com/NelsonJeppesen/nix-home-manager
| kureikain wrote:
| A service to forward email from your custom domain to your
| personal domain with some extra features such as webhook.
|
| All you have to do point MX records to my service and start
| forward email. Add webhook and you can have cool thing such as
| email to comment, email to upload.
|
| Right now I'm trying to enhance production setup, improve spam
| filtering before my public launch.
|
| ---
|
| https://hanami.run my app if you are curious
| pryelluw wrote:
| I like the email as JSON feature. Good stuff
| moehm wrote:
| I was curious what HN may find interesting, so I used upvoted or
| discussed articles from Wikipedia as a proxy and build
| https://www.mostdiscussed.com/about. All articles are structured
| and categorized to get a better overview. (Unsurprisingly
| computing was on the top, but then it might get interesting.)
| allthingstim wrote:
| MeetInOne, a Mac app for Google Meet with lots of additional
| features (dark mode, picture-in-picture etc):
| https://apps.apple.com/de/app/meetinone-for-google-meet/id15...
|
| Launched in December and currently at about ~75k downloads
| paulryanrogers wrote:
| Browser Routr to intercept links within a browser to open in
| another.
|
| https://PaulRRogers.com/product/browser-routr
| lcnmrn wrote:
| I'm working on new features for https://subreply.com social
| network/forum.
| zeroxfe wrote:
| https://pitchy.ninja -- An online vocal and ear trainer using
| real-time pitch detection.
| cinntaile wrote:
| This doesn't load without disabling ublock by the way, it's
| blocking Sentry by default.
| notretarded wrote:
| Under NDA. Nice try, FBI.
| ohazi wrote:
| What the hell, here are a bunch of half-baked ideas that I
| haven't made time for because I'm lazy and stressed out and
| exhausted:
|
| 1. Designing a protocol and air interface for an amateur radio
| cellular network. This started out with some spread spectrum
| experiments and an interest in low-probability-of-intercept
| (below the noise floor) communication. The idea I have now is
| sort of a cross between APRS and DMR using modern modulation
| techniques. The network would consist of amateur rooftop "cells"
| with internet connections, and mobile transponders that
| communicate with those cells. There'd be some sort of callsign or
| key based addressing scheme and IP-like network topology
| discovery. Everything will be authenticated. I'd love to have an
| encrypted mode, but unless the laws change, it probably isn't
| going to happen.
|
| 2. Open-source firmware or gateware implementation of a USB PD
| controller that supports entering/exiting alternate modes
| properly. Inspired by Kate Temkin's Luna project [1]. I got the
| impression that PD was out of scope for LUNA, at least for the
| time being, but it would be really nice to have both a USB and PD
| stack that could be integrated onto a small, inexpensive chip
| without the proprietary mess.
|
| [1] https://github.com/greatscottgadgets/luna
| mseo wrote:
| https://clips.fm - A tool that converts podcast audio to
| shareable & social media ready videos.
|
| The video creation and the transcoding is all done in the
| browser, so it was quite a technical challenge. It's far from
| perfect, but it works and it's improving every day.
| tjkrusinski wrote:
| Are you using the ffmpeg wasm thingy?
| Austin_Conlon wrote:
| Browser extension for shared Apple TV+ viewing, like those
| Netflix party extensions and the feature that's now built into
| Hulu. It's for a remote hackathon, so I figure the scope is good
| for one day, and it's something I'd use myself.
| LegitGandalf wrote:
| A web application that teaches Software Engineering Management
| theory
| louisstow wrote:
| Got a waiting list I can sub to? Sounds interesting
| louisstow wrote:
| Working on a platform to collect unstructured security data from
| a variety of sources and aggregate into structured data that can
| be queried, monitored and used in various different tools like
| scanners. No link to show right now though.
| NicoJuicy wrote:
| Building an e-commerce platform after having an e-commerce for
| years.
|
| The first one in action is https://belgianbrewed.com and sold to
| my supplier (also a friend) and he has one of the bigger
| warehouses here for Belgian beers.
|
| I'm now building a couple of b2b's on it and continuing to add
| features ( eg. partial products, using ML.Net for related
| products, integration with other software, ...)
|
| I'm also trying to migrate my own shop from Woocommerce to it,
| but haven't had the time yet ( no blog functionality for now).
|
| Splitting up the code to DDD has slowed down adding new
| functionality for now ( a lot is migrated, but not everything).
| But it should improve development complexity in a later stage.
|
| TLDR: It's fun seeing the product come to life
| kasbah wrote:
| A platform for sharing electronics projects with a focus on
| replication (actually building the projects).
|
| https://kitspace.org
| kostarelo wrote:
| https://www.taskeera.com/: Monitoring background and async jobs
| from start to finish. Half of the infrastructure and coding is
| done but I didn't find a big audience so I'm in the process of
| just open sourcing it.
|
| https://presentador.dev: Opinionated presentation framework based
| on MarkDown.
| nknealk wrote:
| Like the Sunday crossword but SQL puzzles instead. Currently
| working on a back catalog of content and hope to launch later
| this year.
| koeng wrote:
| I'm interested! Do you have a sign up page or something?
| adamtester wrote:
| Been working on a Social Network specifically for car
| enthusiasts, I don't really intend to make money from it, just to
| try out new technology.
|
| Built on Ionic 5, Capacitor, Lambda
|
| Feedback welcome!
|
| http://overtune.io
| rvin wrote:
| Hey all! Built out a passion project app to help podcasters find
| new listeners.
|
| Each podcaster is given a channel with a public facing website
| for their podcast. To give prospective listeners a taste of an
| episode, post an audio clip with a key moment (has to be less
| than 5 minutes long). We take these clips and serve them in a
| feed of posts for listeners.
|
| Example Website: https://jointidbit.com/c/startupadvice
|
| App: https://apps.apple.com/us/app/tidbit-snackable-
| audio/id14656...
|
| Thanks everyone!
| sideproject wrote:
| I've been working on Newsy for the past ~8 months.
|
| https://www.newsy.co
|
| Problem - I had lots of domains I've bought over the years which
| I never used!
|
| Solution - I created a tool to automatically turn these un-used
| domains into a Reddit-like content aggregator. I wanted it to be
| fully automated with lots of content + social features (voting,
| members, newsletters).
|
| It's been super fun creating it and also sharing with people who
| are also using it.
|
| Some examples
|
| https://www.faithfulnews.com
|
| https://www.getinfosec.news
|
| https://www.heystartup.com
| Waterluvian wrote:
| The sound for my Game Boy emulator.
|
| A play structure for my kids.
|
| A large refactor of my GIS software stack at work to scale for
| the next ten thousand robots.
|
| A diet that's not really a diet but more of a lifestyle change:
| don't worry about weight or "healthy" choices. Just. Count. The.
| Calories. Hugely successful one month in.
| bvlaar wrote:
| https://www.carboninterface.com ----- Carbon Interface is an API
| to generate carbon emissions estimates. Right now my API can
| calculate emissions for flights, driving, shipping and
| electricity generation.
|
| In addition to making the estimates more robust, I am working on
| having the algorithms behind the estimates certified by
| international bodies to increase the trust of my API.
| nexuist wrote:
| WTF. This is unironically exactly what I need for work right
| now. Definitely looking into this!
| dewey wrote:
| I currently have two projects I'm working on.
|
| - https://annoying.technology: A blog about...annoying technology
|
| - https://lastcast.fm: A tool to automatically collect which
| podcasts you are listening to. It gives you statistics, a way to
| discover new podcasts and the possibility to see what your
| friends are listening to.
| iamacyborg wrote:
| Lastfm for podcasts sounds like a great idea!
| dewey wrote:
| Thanks! There's still a lot of work to do, currently the site
| is also a bit slow as it's running on a small instance and
| the whole ingestion process of new podcasts is pretty heavy.
| samuelroth wrote:
| I'm building Career, a mobile-first resume manager. It's in its
| early stages but I'm already tentatively using it for my own,
| hoping to add people to a beta soon.
|
| https://twitter.com/thecareerapp
| justhw wrote:
| I did a Show HN on monday with https://thumbnail.ai/ got some
| useful feedback and have been working on it every night.
| lpellis wrote:
| Working on https://pagewatch.dev , a tool to find all kinds of
| website issues. Also a nice excuse to play with hasura and
| graphql.
| immnn wrote:
| I'm working on a gaming deals website that scrapes all the deals
| from console shops (PlayStation, Switch, Xbox) and then tries to
| get the games rating from metacriric. The clue is, all the deals
| are ordered by score.
|
| It's German-only, but maybe your interested:
| https://www.konsolen-deals.de/
| worker767424 wrote:
| Trying my hand at algorithmic trading, mostly out of regret
| minimization. I've sunk in a lot of time, and almost none of it
| has been on trading models. So far, it's all pretty much data
| mining, data cleaning, and the infra for it.
| derekp7 wrote:
| I have an open source snapshot backup system
| (https://www.snebu.com) that I've been improving over the years,
| and after adding public key encryption support I posted to HN and
| I actually made the front page for once (this was on a Sunday
| afternoon however).
|
| Got some feedback, a couple more contributors sent in pull
| requests, and based on other feedback I decided to submit a
| package to Fedora (currently working through their review
| process). Will try for Debian next.
|
| What I'd like to do after getting more traction is put together a
| cloud based service for either sending backups directly or
| replicating a local repository to the cloud. I think the best way
| to go here is to partner with an existing provider instead of
| starting from scratch.
|
| One thing I need to do is work on my elevator pitch, as Snebu
| often gets compared to smaller single-host backup tools such as
| rsync-snapshot based ones, or Borg or Restic. Whereas it is more
| comparable to tools that are intended to back up multiple hosts
| (Amanda, Bacula), with granular access controls, per-host
| encryption keys (optional) with site-wide skeleton keys (again
| optional), and a robust data catalog.
| koeng wrote:
| Using SQLite seems like a good way to get around some of the
| limitations that Restic has. Do you have any benchmarks against
| Borg and Restic?
|
| I'm looking for smaller single-host backup tools. I have
| approximately a ~1Tb Postgres database I need to backup once a
| month (that's how often genomic data is released) and I'm a
| little worried about Restic RAM usage, since I have hit it when
| backing up a few other files. I'm trying to figure out if snebu
| would be a good fit for my low-ram machines.
| derekp7 wrote:
| In the one case I'm backing up about 60 development / testing
| VMs (they are based on a handful of RHEL / CentOS versions).
| The backup speed runs at the speed of my network connection
| (or the disk that I'm pulling from). For each snapshot, it
| takes about 2 - 3 minutes to transfer the full file manifest
| from the client to the Snebu server, and typically my backups
| are only a few minutes of transferring the modified files.
|
| Compared to Borg, Snebu can handle dozens of servers going to
| the same repository, and does file-level dedplication across
| clients (since many are based on the same base build, there
| is a lot of space saving there). However, compression is a
| bit less because I'm using LZO, and not doing block-level
| deduplication -- on my test setup I see Snebu taking about 5
| - 10% more space than Borg on an initial backup (haven't
| tested Borg on much more than that, but will at some point).
|
| Also, compared to Borg and Restic, if you are backing up
| something with large databases or VM image files, Snebu may
| not be suitable as it is file-level deduplication instead of
| block level. However I typically back up VMs from inside the
| VM (not from the bare metal host), and for databases I do a
| full hot backup once a week and just do archived redo logs
| daily.
|
| There's documentation on how to create plugin scripts for
| DB's and the like (with a template script in the docs) -- I'm
| putting together more examples that handle Oracle,
| Postgresql, and maybe LVM snapshots specifically.
| garbanzoPDX wrote:
| https://kindmind.com/ -- a free online journal with a focus on
| mental health and wellness.
|
| Doesn't generate a dime of income (I mean... it's free, at least
| for now) but it's a fun project to work on, something I care
| deeply about, and it helps me keep my skills sharp.
| r2b2 wrote:
| Owl Mail [https://owlmail.io]
|
| * It's like Privacy.com, but for email.
|
| * Create anonymous email addresses. * Owl Mail relays messages to
| your normal email address. * De-activate an Owl Mail address at
| anytime to reduce spam, phishing, and malware when a company
| leaks or sells your Owl Mail address.
| flixic wrote:
| Do you plan to support custom domains? I'd like to use
| random_nonsense@my_own_domain.com, so that even if OwlMail
| disappears, I can do something about all the mail I would be
| getting.
| r2b2 wrote:
| Yes, but that comes with a caveat -
|
| If you use a custom domain (without thousands of users), you
| lose the anonymity benefit of Owl Mail (the domain itself
| becomes the identifier). Which means BigCoA and BigCoB can
| still trade tracking / advertising info on you.
| jrockway wrote:
| Many things!
|
| jsso2: Identity provider and authenticating proxy for your non-
| enterprise use cases. WebAuthn only, no passwords! I was tired of
| typing a password for things like Grafana and PGAdmin, and IP
| whitelisting my home Internet for things that didn't have built-
| in authentication. https://github.com/jrockway/jsso2
|
| If I were starting from 0 today, I'd just use Dex and Envoy's
| built-in OAuth support. OAuth is overly complicated, requiring a
| bunch of configuration for each app, and a ton of code in each
| app... but it won. So use that.
|
| jlog: I read a lot of log files in my day-to-day work and really
| like the idea of structured logs, but found them hard to read.
| jlog translates timestamps to my local time zone, lets me query
| them with jq, etc.: https://github.com/jrockway/json-logs Can't
| live without it, I use it many times every day, and have even
| convinced other people to use it without writing any
| documentation. (There are binary releases and a --help though!)
|
| "kubectl jq": I wanted to play with writing Kubernetes plugins,
| so I made one that is just "kubectl get x -o json | jq". I use it
| pretty regularly, but the Kubernetes client machinery doesn't
| give you autocompletion for free, so it's pretty painful to use.
| When they fix that, I plan to write more kubernetes extensions
| (including one that invokes jlog on the logs, saving a pipe ;)
| https://github.com/jrockway/kubectl-jq
|
| alertmanager-status: How do you know if your
| Prometheus/Alertmanager is working? If it breaks, it won't be
| sending you an alert, after all.
| https://github.com/jrockway/alertmanager-status
|
| ekglue: The good parts of Istio, written by someone who read the
| xDS spec :P https://github.comjrockway/ekglue
|
| For my day job, I work on Pachyderm Hub, which you should totally
| use if you want to run production-quality data science workloads
| (data provenance, reproducibility, etc.):
| https://hub.pachyderm.com/ I could write a lot about it, but
| basically... we have customers that want to use Pachyderm, but
| the complexity of Kubernetes stands in their way. How do you
| store logs? How do you monitor things? How do you give your
| coworkers access? We solve those problems by letting you click a
| button in a web UI. (As for why you'd want to use Pachyderm:
| https://www.pachyderm.com/use-cases/)
| mfi wrote:
| https://github.com/maxvfischer/Arthur An AI art installation I
| built from scratch using a GAN network, Samsung The Frame, a
| button and a PIR-sensor (including, code, images and tutorial).
| The installation is basically done. The main draft of the guide
| is almost done, but quite some polishing to do.
|
| https://github.com/maxvfischer/shibusa An automatic Zen Garden
| drawing infinite patterns in sand. Using stepper motors, inverse
| kinematics and a Raspberry Pi Zero W (including, code, images and
| tutorial). I'm almost done building the robot, but still have
| quite some implementation to do. Also, the guide is far from
| done, I've mostly uploaded images so far.
| samirsd wrote:
| wow that's so cool! do you have any videos of this in action?
| mfi wrote:
| Thanks! If I'm able to comment tomorrow when I wake up, I'll
| take a video of the AI art installation in action.
|
| Regarding the Zen Garden, it's to early to show it draw
| anything yet. I've got the SCARA robot to move, but it's not
| really following the coordinates properly. Still some
| progress to be made ;)
|
| But I have documented a previous project where I built a
| full-size arcade machine. If you scroll down to the end,
| you'll find some images and videos :)
| https://github.com/maxvfischer/DIY-arcade
| boldslogan wrote:
| An api for on boarding users with their passport and their phone.
| I've gotten the ocr and rfid chip reading down to a couple
| seconds.
|
| I have such a good url I can't stop now.
|
| https://passportreader.app/
| kop316 wrote:
| I have been working to add MMS to the Pinephone/Librem 5!
|
| https://source.puri.sm/kop316/mmsd/
| https://source.puri.sm/kop316/purple-mm-sms
|
| I have been logging it here:
|
| https://forum.pine64.org/showthread.php?tid=12491
| allenu wrote:
| I released a flashcard app for macOS and iOS around Halloween.
| I'd been working on it on and off on the side for a year as a
| side project. I'm continuing to work on new features and tweaks,
| but need to do more work on marketing it, which, as a dev, is the
| hardest part. :)
|
| https://www.ussherpress.com/freshcards/
| sharpercoder wrote:
| Markdown generators, extensions, extension syntaxes, markdown-
| markdown enrichers.
| ijustlovemath wrote:
| Two things:
|
| - a distributed simplex downlink protocol for low power
| satellites. Think torrenting for LEO
|
| - my startup, which is building a closed loop artificial pancreas
| for hospitals. First human trials are coming up early this year!
| databaseguy wrote:
| I am building a database for visual data (images, videos, feature
| vectors, etc). We just landed our first Fortune 50 customer.
| https://aperturedata.io
| Jakobeha wrote:
| I'm trying to get creative because I have nothing else to do, but
| it's hard :).
|
| I'm learning different drawing apps and music production apps. My
| drawing is like a 7-year old (quoted from someone else) but I
| used to play piano and my coding skills are decent.
| ajakate wrote:
| What drawing apps are you using? Any success with those? I've
| tried drawabox.com in the past, and try coming back to it every
| year or two for a stint. It's definitely helped me improve my
| drawing, but it's hard for me to stay focused with it...
| aemerson_ wrote:
| Working on a clothing basics review/comparison site at
| https://www.typicalcontents.com/
|
| Too much choice when it comes to basics like underwear, socks,
| t-shirts, shirts. So I research the best ones online and pick up
| a bunch to find the best. I probably would have done something
| like it anyway, but myself and a couple of friends started
| publishing our reviews in the hopes others would find it useful.
| [deleted]
| alixanderwang wrote:
| I'm building a autolayout algorithm specifically [0] for software
| diagrams.
|
| The autolayout algorithm will be used for generating pretty
| software architecture diagrams from text that get you 90% of the
| way there, and then you can tweek it to perfection via a UI.
|
| I have an alpha out of the algorithm on https://terrastruct.com
| and it's by far the hardest thing I've worked on, and it mostly
| works, though I'm constantly finding ways to improve it.
|
| [0] It needs to handle containers and clusters, its connections
| should be mostly orthogonally routed (the tree structure with
| curved routing in default graphviz is mostly unsuitable), prefer
| symmetrical structures while reducing total edge distance, etc.
| stevenpetryk wrote:
| Neat! I love things that help engineers document their stuff
| better.
| ngokevin wrote:
| An app to help couples learn each other's languages
| (https://learncoupling.com)
|
| My wife is Chinese, and I've been learning Cantonese and Mandarin
| off-and-on on my own for years. For many reasons, I recognize
| it's extremely difficult to make it work to acquire a language
| with the help of a romantic partner. I even had a friend who's
| wife was a doctorate in French language education but completely
| failed to use her as a resource.
|
| I've identified some of the pitfalls and am developing a system
| to get native speaking partners more involved in language
| learner's journeys in a fun and encouraging way (not as a
| teacher).
|
| This is my second startup! Went through YC once on my first one
| (related to VR). Been using YC Startup School this time around.
| dewey wrote:
| This looks really neat, just subscribed to the newsletter.
| enos_feedler wrote:
| At first glance, I thought you meant languages in the
| metaphorical sense. I actually thought that sounded cool. Sort
| of like a gamified way of understanding what makes each other
| feel loved, etc. Just wanted to add this idea in there.
| simonw wrote:
| I've just hit the three year mark with https://datasette.io/ - my
| open source tool for exploring, analyzing and publishing data.
|
| The project is built on plugins which means it keeps on growing
| in different directions - I have 51 plugins at
| https://datasette.io/plugins now and 23 more tools for working
| with SQLite data at https://datasette.io/tools
|
| My goal now is to get Datasette itself to a stable 1.0 release
| (partly to encourage more plugin development by other people) and
| to get the SaaS hosted version of the project to a point where it
| can accept paying customers (it's been in beta for quite a while
| now).
| koeng wrote:
| Awesome package! I've been thinking about using datasette for
| some genomics data for a while. The value prop of "make nice
| visualization on top of SQLite" was very clear to me. Thanks
| for making an awesome project
| simonw wrote:
| Genomics data would be a fascinating application, I'd love to
| hear how that works out.
| gfodor wrote:
| The video game for work, Jel.
|
| https://jel.app
|
| (Yes, FTUE needs a lot of work, working on that now!)
| riyakhanna1983 wrote:
| Been working on a new hypervisor that can directly run isolated
| containers (not VMs) to enable secure micro-services without
| virtualization overhead. Email me if interested in testing or
| contributing.
| kjok wrote:
| Very cool! What's the overhead compared to VMs?
| iamacyborg wrote:
| I'm not doing the building directly myself, but working on a
| product for the tattoo industry.
|
| I recently started a Marketing Operations podcast, which is
| mostly just an opportunity for me to talk with interesting
| people.
|
| Finally, I'm putting together a training course on email
| marketing for beginners.
| sean_pedersen wrote:
| https://github.com/SeanPedersen/HyperTag
|
| HyperTag helps humans intuitively express how they think about
| their files using tags and machine learning. Represent how you
| think using tags. Find what you look for using semantic search
| for your text documents (yes, even PDF's) and images. Instead of
| introducing proprietary file formats like other existing file
| organization tools, HyperTag just smoothly layers on top of your
| existing files without any fuss.
| danskeren wrote:
| I've been working on-and-off on Ask.Moe, a European non-profit,
| free and open-source software, privacy-focused search engine.
|
| The general-purpose search engine (which is built on top of Bing)
| is however not ready for daily use, because I haven't figured out
| how to cover the costs of Bing's API.. so after a certain amount
| of monthly searches then it will redirect all queries to Google.
| DDG and Ecosia appear to be relying on Microsoft Advertising, but
| not sure how to join that, especially when the website has a very
| limited user-base. Perhaps requiring a paid subscription for the
| general-purpose search is the best option for now.
|
| The initial plan is to launch different categories, such as
| Podcast, Food, News, Job, Shop, Flight, Code, Sport, etc. since
| this will allow us to provide superior search results compared to
| any general-purpose search engine.
|
| So far we have implemented support for the categories Search,
| Math, Currency, as well as the recently launched Domain name
| finder (https://ask.moe/domain).
|
| If anyone is interested in working together to obtain and
| maintain high quality data for these categories then feel free to
| reach out (but I'm a quite busy these days so expect a slow
| reply) :)
|
| I'm also working on a gaming/esports website (but not ready for
| launch), as well as the occasional weekend projects.
| ar-nelson wrote:
| A peer-to-peer data sync library for native apps, based on UDP
| discovery and CRDTs. It's nowhere near done, but the GitHub
| README describes it thoroughly:
|
| https://github.com/ar-nelson/osmosis-js
| davidwparker wrote:
| Most of last year I worked on https://www.listenaddict.com/ which
| is a site in where you subscribe to a person instead of a podcast
| and get notified whenever they have a new talk on any podcast
| (and in the future, YouTube and other sources).
|
| I'm still tweaking the algorithms on that for autodetecting names
| and making sure the podcast sources I have are mostly interview-
| based.
|
| I've recently started working on https://www.useproducer.com/ (no
| site up yet), which will be a project management / analytics tool
| for YouTube and Podcasts.
| gradys wrote:
| I made a tool for visualizing text datasets in 2D or 3D:
| https://nebulate.ai
|
| It runs a machine learning model in your browser to convert the
| text into points in a high dimensional space, and then it
| projects those points down to 2/3D.
|
| Right now you can tell it to visualize post titles or comments
| from any subreddit or load an hourly updating snapshot of
| Twitter.
|
| You can also view your own data in it by selecting the New Nebula
| option. The data never leaves the browser, which also means the
| ML models are run in-browser (via tensorflow.js). This part might
| be slow and only works in Chrome unfortunately.
|
| If you're interested in this kind of thing, I'd love to hear from
| you! Here or by email (grady.hsimon at gmail)
| blue-dragonfly wrote:
| Overall, working on a CAD/CAM/CAE system using SDF and functional
| representation. Today flattening a C++ OO scene graph library to
| a use functional approach. Also today, continuing work on
| adapting a small Scheme implementation to read models in a Lisp
| format.
| AKluge wrote:
| Just picked up my Schrodinger equation solver again. Working on
| testing on multiple platforms and improving the boundary
| condition handling. After this I'll be looking at building some
| interesting educational content with active simulations. All
| openly licensed.
| http://www.vizitsolutions.com/portfolio/webgl/gpgpu/schrodin...
| bwood wrote:
| I'm working on an app that turns brokerage accounts into a fully
| customizable robo-advisor. Create a target portfolio made up of
| stocks/ETFs, and our app will keep everything balanced and fully
| invested.
|
| We're starting with this simple use case of keeping a balanced
| portfolio, but really we see brokerage accounts as a financial
| operating system that's lacking good software.
|
| We're already on TD Ameritrade and Interactive Brokers, check it
| out!
|
| https://passiv.com/
| missedthecue wrote:
| This is very cool. Well done.
| bwood wrote:
| Thanks!
| sentinel wrote:
| Mick Tagger (http://www.micktagger.app) - I humorously say that
| the app contains "the missing Spotify keyboard shortcuts".
|
| Besides having keyboard shortcuts for adding songs to playlists,
| liking songs, automatic queueing etc. it also has a couple of
| smart playlist features to improve your Spotify listening
| experience.
|
| I'm always looking for feedback, so please let me know if you end
| up giving it a try.
| rock_hard wrote:
| Some friends and I are working over at https://flux.ai on a sane
| design tool chain for hardware engineers
|
| Spent the whole day fixing bugs
| pzagor2 wrote:
| https://urlrec.com/
|
| Export web animations as mp4 videos.
|
| Did you build an awesome Codepen and you want to share it on
| social media as video. Just send me the URL I'll send you back
| the video (well the API will).
| blue-dragonfly wrote:
| Overall, working on a CAD system using SDF and functional
| representation. Currently flattening a C++ OO scene graph library
| to a use functional approach. Also, today, continuing work on
| adapting a small Scheme implementation to read models in a Lisp
| format.
| callmeed wrote:
| I'm building a DTC ecommerce directory and discovery platform:
| https://www.shiny.sale/
|
| It's sort of a "stumbleupon for ecommerce" and curated
| brand/product index. It started because I grew increasingly
| frustrated with Amazon last year, which culminated in my account
| getting compromised and closed. I had been keeping a spreadsheet
| of DTC brands I liked so I turned it into this.
| [deleted]
| mattivc wrote:
| https://github.com/matiasvc/Toucan A Computer Vision and Robotics
| visualization library.
|
| It is way to hard and complex to do 2D and 3D visualization in
| C++. Toucan is my attempt to solve that. It can be called from
| anywhere with minimal code and gives you interactive 2D and 3D
| visualization.
| andersforsgren wrote:
| After all the buzz about "UnClack" (the type-to-mute thing for
| mac) people were asking for a Windows version. So I made one.
|
| https://github.com/andersforsgren/knatter
| yawgmoth wrote:
| I am working on a hex-tile game in which multiple players spawn
| on a map of some radius. Each tile has a value and a growth
| function. Each player can select a tile and make a move and
| accumulate the value of tiles they own, or split the difference
| with an opponent to try and claim a tile. To knock a player out,
| claim their home tile and be rewarded with ownership of all their
| assets. To win, be the last player standing.
|
| I played a square-tile version of this game somewhere and can't
| find it anymore, so I figured I'd build it for myself.
| koeng wrote:
| https://github.com/TimothyStiles/poly a modern synthetic biology
| library written in Go. Aiming at building some awesome stuff
| (codon optimization, synthesis optimization, RBS calculator, etc)
| that should really help in forward engineering life.
|
| sporenetlabs.com Building a method to do massive amounts of
| affordable DNA distribution. I'm still working on the backend for
| that one.
| aerovistae wrote:
| A better site to play Magic the Gathering over the web with.
| Current options are not great.
|
| The interface is straightforward enough to implement but syncing
| game state across multiple clients is something I've never even
| remotely ever worked on before, being mostly a frontend dev, and
| I'm having a pretty hard time.
| icey wrote:
| Building a better chatbot / automation platform called Abbot -
| https://ab.bot
|
| My friend and I used to do a ton of Hubot scripting but wanted to
| use a language other than Coffeescript to do it. So, we built a
| bot that used C#... then we realized there was a lot of other
| stuff that we had to do to run a bot, so we built a platform to
| run it (and added support for Python and JavaScript while we were
| at it).
|
| We handle all the annoying stuff about running a bot (hosting,
| persistence, secrets management, job scheduling) and add a bunch
| of other cool stuff on top (Triggers, which make it so that Abbot
| can respond to events from outside chat or on a schedule, a
| package manager so people can easily share skills, the ability to
| create some kinds of skills from inside chat, etc).
|
| The timing of this Ask HN is perfect -- we've been running a beta
| for Slack users for the past few weeks and just started beta for
| Discord yesterday. We handle all the middleware so skills written
| for Abbot work in both Slack and Discord without any changes.
|
| Everything is free during beta, and we'll always have a free plan
| for basic bot usage (we will probably tier based on the number of
| custom skills people have running).
|
| If you do end up trying it out, please let us know you found out
| about Abbot from this thread -- just say `@abbot feedback I found
| this from HN!` or `@abbot feedback I came from Hacker News` or
| something similar. We're going to do something fun for our beta
| testers (probably have some fun stickers made). We love feedback,
| so even if you don't try it out; I'd love to hear why. My email
| is in my profile!
| rurban wrote:
| Yet another glib, a STL for C, which is header-only, complete,
| tiny and sucks much less.
|
| https://github.com/rurban/ctl
| blue-dragonfly wrote:
| I've been looking for a map like C++ STL written in C. I need
| to lookup symbols to get function pointers, among other uses.
| Part of a general process of replacing C++ with C. Maybe I have
| found it? Interesting project, thanks for posting.
| recursivedoubts wrote:
| htmx and hyperscript:
|
| https://htmx.org - a small no-js front end library
|
| https://hyperscript - an embeddable scripting language for web
| pages
| lytedev wrote:
| It's an app for churches (or any live performance) to display and
| manage lyrics.
|
| http://alpha.lyricscreen.com:6754/
|
| I'm missing accounts and some of the more frilly features, like
| different fonts and backgrounds.
|
| All the info is shared and HN could probably crash it. It's all
| synced live, so it's very (too) collaborative.
| mayorpinto wrote:
| A spreadsheet app which also let's you use APIs/web services as
| regular spreadsheet functions. This lets you consume data from
| external sources and/or push data out to automate things, for
| example.
|
| Details at https://rows.com
| enjeyw wrote:
| An aggregator ala reddit/hackernews/twitter that uses a market
| mechanism to better incentivise content discovery.
|
| One of the biggest issues with existing aggregators is that:
|
| - how well content performs is dependant on the attention it gets
| immediately after posting.
|
| - However, readers aren't incentivised to sift carefully through
| new content, which is generally of lower quality than "frontpage"
| content
|
| - This means that how content performs is a lottery. Great
| content is often missed just by chance
|
| - This in turn means that there's no platform that encourages
| unknown authors to create high-effort, thoughtful pieces. Instead
| it's far more effective to blogspam.
|
| I'm working on a platform that uses something similar to a
| prediction/stock market to incentivise people to search for high-
| quality content. Instead of upvoting, you effectively buy shares
| in new content, which you can then sell at a later point for a
| profit if the content proves popular. Equally you can buy
| "downvote shares", which act like a short and help dampen rampant
| speculation.
|
| It's early days still, but I'm hoping this could be a great way
| to encourage higher quality content creation.
|
| Draft paper here:
| https://drive.google.com/file/d/15Hc6wAXlfl8x5C0w11m7ZOEpbjj...
| skulk wrote:
| This is the most interesting take on realigning
| (micro?)blogging incentives I've ever seen. I hope it gets its
| chance with millions of users, even if it has incorrigible
| issues like our current standard.
| thotsBgone wrote:
| Just make sure "selling" of shares can be automatic, because
| nobody wants to go back to a post they already read just to
| sell their shares or whatever.
| dmingod666 wrote:
| Haven't used it in a while, but I think pinterest is one of the
| better ones in this context.
| whitepaint wrote:
| This sounds really cool.
| adamnemecek wrote:
| IDE for music composition http://ngrid.io. I'm launching soon.
| brazzy wrote:
| A minimalist roguelike game (still pretty early).
|
| https://github.com/brazzy/Galgenvogel
| Xixi wrote:
| https://tomotcha.com ----- a tea subscription service. It's still
| a tiny side business, slowly growing. It's a great project to get
| out of my comfort zone and learn about e-commerce, logistics,
| etc. And I get to drink a lot of different teas...
| RMPR wrote:
| https://github.com/rmpr/atbswp polishing up a bit my macro
| recorder
| stevenpetryk wrote:
| A while back I got a React component library for math
| visualization [0] to a pretty good state. Hoping to continue
| working on it as I find time.
|
| [0]: https://mafs.dev/
| henning wrote:
| I am continuing to play around with genetic programming in Rust.
| Specifically, I am working towards building my own implementation
| of a recent team-based hierarchical algorithm called Tangled
| Program Graphs. http://stephenkelly.ca/research_files/open-
| kelly17a.pdf
| beatthatflight wrote:
| Still building out more of https://www.beatthatflight.com.au -
| travel sure took a hit with covid, but it's given me time to
| build more automation to find and list cheap flights over say, a
| 3 month period in a table to find the cheapest date in a quarter
| for users. Lets me quickly analyse Jetstar or Qantas or Virgin
| Australia deals and find the few cheapest flights that match
| their lowest sale prices, AND sometimes I can find it cheaper
| than the airline itself.
|
| But yeah, covid. Travel sucks right now.
| uberswe wrote:
| A CMS written in Go. It's still very early and it has the basics
| of user creation, multiple domain support, themes and user
| management by default. What will make it really powerful is
| plugins.
|
| Plugins are still being developed and currently use the go plugin
| package which is really good for performance but can be bad for
| security and compatibility with versions and operating systems. I
| plan to either move over to using RPC instead or supporting both
| options.
|
| Everything is available on GitHub under the MIT License.
|
| https://github.com/uberswe/beubo
___________________________________________________________________
(page generated 2021-01-14 23:00 UTC)