- Kvile ( https://kvile.app ) — A lightweight desktop HTTP client built with Rust + Tauri. Native .http file support (JetBrains/VS Code/Kulala compatible), Monaco editor, JS pre/post scripts, SQLite-backed history. Sub-second startup. MIT licensed, no cloud, your requests stay on your machine. Think Postman without the bloat and login walls.
- Mockingjay ( https://apps.apple.com/us/app/mockingjay-secure-recorder/id6... ) — iOS app that records video and streams AES-256-GCM encrypted chunks to your Google Drive in real-time. By the time someone takes your phone, the footage is already safe in the cloud. Built for journalists, activists, and anyone who needs tamper-proof evidence. Features a duress PIN that wipes local keys while preserving cloud backups, and a fake sleep mode that makes the phone look powered off during recording.
- Stao ( https://stao.app ) — A simple sit/stand reminder for standing desk users. Runs in the system tray, tracks your streaks, zero setup. Available on macOS, Windows, Linux, iOS, and Android.
- MyVisualRoutine ( https://myvisualroutine.com ) — This one is personal. I have three kids, two with severe disabilities. Visual schedules (laminated cards, velcro boards) are a lifeline for non-verbal children, but they're a nightmare to manage and they don't leave the house. So I built an app that lets you create a full visual routine in about 20 seconds and take it anywhere. Choice boards, First/Then boards, day plans, 50+ preloaded activities, works fully offline. Free tier is genuinely usable. Available on iOS and Android.
I built a TUI sampler which cherry-picks my favourite features from modern & vintage hardware samplers, DAWs, plugins, outboard FX gear, and DJ equipment.
If you know what an AKAI MPC Live, MPC 3000, SP404, SP1200, BOSS RC-202, Alesis 3630, Serato Sample, S950 filters, and stem separation does, then you'll love seeing these "greatest hits" up in a terminal interface.
Last year while on vacation in Costa Rica, I started scratching my own itch for locating and organizing samples, which quickly evolved into adding more and more features while keeping it tactile and immediate. It was too fun to stop so I kept going. After a few days I was happily making beats in it, and since then it's only gotten better.
It's live and totally free to use, and works in macos & Linux (Windows soon). I'm about to launch v1.0 now, just working with folks in the community to round out the Factory Kits a little more for users new to beatmaking.
Turns out, making beats with no mouse and a terminal interface strikes the perfect balance of hardware feel and software power, and I'm loving the result. Been sharing it with folks in my beatmaking sphere and have plans to continue expanding its reach through more collaborations, contests, and in-person events.
Hope it brings you as much joy as it does to me :)
We've been using it with friends and family semi-successfully (hashbangs work for edge cases we're still working on).
It's really difficult to get bigger indexes other than Mojeek and Marginalia to want to work with us and improve the results further, so that's something I've been researching more, lately. EUSP (the new Ecosia/Qwant-effort-related index) has finally replied to me last week, but I'm still waiting on an API key.
If you're interested in trying it for a few days and are a human, reach out with your account number and I'll give you a couple of weeks for free. We're pushing improvements daily.
[2] https://kagi.com
P. S. It's weird to see this duplicate (posted less than a week ago in https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46874385), but this post has a lot more comments!
It's a lightweight screen recorder for macOS that lives in your menu bar. It's built with SwiftUI and ScreenCaptureKit, uses the native Content Picker to select what you record, and supports ProRes 422/4444, HEVC, and H.264 — including alpha channel and HDR. Frame rates from 24 to 120fps. System audio and mic simultaneously. You can also exclude specific things from recordings, like the menu bar, dock, or wallpaper.
No tracking, no analytics, no cloud uploads, no account. MIT licensed. Everything stays on your Mac.
https://github.com/Fingel/gelly
I thought it would be pretty simple, but here I am almost 6 months later still adding features. The positive feedback has been nice, though! People seem to appreciate (like I do) that its fast and doesn't use Electron or some other cross platform toolkit. Learning a lot.
It's not vibe coded. Sad that I have to make that qualification these days, but here we are.
A broke kid wins a spot at a high-tech genius school and finds out the “cool” project is really mind control for the whole world. Now he has to out-hack teachers, drones, and a traitor friend using only his brain, his DIY skills, and the outlaw Mesh. Readers get wild gadgets, sneaky pranks, and fast chases—plus the chance to ask what they would do if adults tried to control every thought in their head.
Final edits from the editor are arriving this week - then I'm off to find a lit agent, hopefully get a publishing deal by the end of 2026. More info below.
Laboratory.love lets you fund independent plastic chemical lab testing of the specific foods you actually buy. Think Consumer Reports meets Kickstarter, but focused on detecting endocrine disruptors in your yogurt, your kid’s snacks, or whatever you’re curious about.
Find a product (or suggest one), contribute to its testing fund, and get full lab results when testing completes. If a product doesn’t reach its goal within 365 days, you’re automatically refunded. All results are published publicly.
This project was inspired by Nat Friedman's PlasticList.org and we use the same ISO 17025-accredited methodology they did, testing three separate production lots per product (when possible) and detecting down to parts-per-billion. The entire protocol is open.
I just published new results today! Turns out Muir Glen's caned Fire Roasted Diced Tomatoes are incredibly low in plastic chemicals. Yay!
Browse funded tests, propose your own, or just follow along: https://laboratory.love
I have created a usb-uart converter board with the CH340 chip. The complete schematic was coded with Circuitscript and then imported as a netlist into kicad pcbnew to do the pcb layout. The design was produced with JLCPCB and after receiving the boards I tested them and they do work! The design files are here https://github.com/liu3hao/usb-uart-bridge. The circuitscript code file is here https://raw.githubusercontent.com/liu3hao/usb-uart-bridge/re... and the generated pdf from the circuitscript code is here: https://github.com/liu3hao/usb-uart-bridge/blob/main/usb_uar...
The motivation for creating Circuitscript is to describe schematics in terms of code rather than graphical UIs after using different CAD packages extensively (Allegro, Altium, KiCAD) for work in the past. I wanted to spend more time thinking about the schematic design itself rather than fiddling around with GUIs.
Please check it out and I look forward to your feedback, especially from electronics designers/hobbyists. Thanks!
https://www.inclusivecolors.com/
Unlike most tools based around autogenerating colors, this is more of an editor that lets you fully customise all the tint/shades to your liking with a focus on accessibility. This is important when you've got existing brand colors to include and want to find accessible color combinations that work together.
Would love feedback in general and especially from designers/devs who have different needs in how they go about creating branded palettes!
Makes your regular's lives easier, and you take regulars out of your queue.
No stupid loyalty apps, no QR Codes, no sign ups.
More "How are you?" and less "Flat White, please"
Here is an article I wrote about it
https://wherethereisawill.substack.com/p/coffee-shop-loyalty...
It is integrated into our coffee shop POS: https://www.beanpos.co.za
https://www.mikeayles.com/#zookeeper-wip
It lets you take photos of all the animals you see to collect them, when you 'capture' a new animal, it gives you fun facts about them.
I seeded it with UK zoos, but there's no reason it can't work elsewhere.
It was built because the signage at a zoo we went to was terrible and we had no idea what some animals were, so it matches your photo with the list of animals to the best of its ability.
It's an infinite canvas that runs SQL.
I've been working with data my entire career. I feel like we need to alt+tab so much. What if we just put it all on a canvas?
Currently very WIP, but there's a simple titanic demo available!
Built with tldraw and duckdb wasm, running on cloudflare durable objects
Each game adds more building blocks to the editor: multiplayer, event systems, NPC behaviors, pathfinding, etc. I build a system once, and then anyone using the editor can use it in a click. For game logic, I recently added a visual event system I’m really excited about. It’s kind of like Unreal Blueprints, but focused on 2D. You pick a trigger, wire conditions, and chain actions in a node graph [1].
Big challenge right now: most people who want to make games needs assets, and don't know how to get/make them. So I’m building a marketplace where pixel artists can upload tilesets/characters, and unlike itch.io, assets are usable directly inside the engine. No ZIP downloads or import setup, just browse and drop into your game. A preview here[2].
Also, if you want to use the editor but ship elsewhere, you can export terrain, animations, and hitboxes to Godot 4. Nothing is locked in.
The engine/editor is at https://craftmygame.com if anyone wants to poke around! And you can test a games here[3][4], and 1 multiplayer game I've tested IRL in a bar [4]!
[1] https://youtu.be/8fRzC2czGJc
[2] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hScOK_naYnk
[3] https://craftmygame.com/game/e310c6fcd8f4448f9dc67aac/r/play
I’ve been shipping AI-written code for 2 years now. I can build something amazing in 40 mins but then spend 4+ hours debugging because the agent has no idea how the libraries it’s calling actually work. Docs are stale, StackOverflow is dead, training data is outdated. Every engineer I talk to has the same problem.
So I built Instagit, an MCP server that lets your coding agent understand any GitHub repo in depth so it can get it right on the first try. Works with Claude Code, Codex, Cursor, OpenClaw, etc.
No API key or account needed to try it out. Just need to share these instructions with your coding agent to get started:
curl -s https://instagit.com/install.md
My retirement treat was to spend three months learning OpenGL and 3D game programming by porting a classic Java RTS game, Tribal Trouble, to more modern OpenGL and Java. I learn much better working with real code and this was a great experience. It was certainly a different experience than it would have been without an LLM teacher, reviewer, helper, assistant. The app was beautifully designed and very cleanly implemented back in Java 1.4 days of 2004 so it has been a joy to modernize it while attempting to preserve the clean design. The OpenGL work and the necessary math was a lot different than what I have been doing for most of my career so it was a lot of fun. I will probably continue tinkering with Tribal Trouble occasionally as I still enjoy playing the game. I want to learn Blender to edit/improve the 3D models. (https://github.com/bondolo/tribaltrouble)
For now I have mostly moved on from gaming and am instead working on improving the accessibility (#a11y) of the Wireshark network protocol capture/analysis tool. There are a lot of blind and low vision IT folks for whom this tool is a job requirement. The current accessibility is unfortunately poor. I've submitted my first PR and am relearning the Wireshark source after last contributing 20 years ago. It's also been 15 years since the last time I did anything with Qt so that has been a refresher as well. I don't enjoy working in C++ but the goal matters so I will suffer through. (https://wireshark.org)
I plan to work on Wireshark for a couple of months at least and then look for something else to contribute to, probably also accessibility related. I have some ideas already about next apps. I'm currently tempted to build an NFC app for iOS in Swift but haven't decided yet. After having built in the last year both Kotlin Compose and TypeScript React apps, none of which I enjoyed very much, I am somewhat curious if Swift and SwiftUI will be more fun.
What I'm most excited about right now is DB Pro Studio: a collaborative web-based version I'm building on top of it.
The idea is simple: databases are a team activity, but every DB tool treats them as a single-player experience. Studio adds either a self-hosted or managed hosted data browser, real-time collaboration, dashboards, visual workflow automation, and enterprise features like audit logging and role-based access. Think "database command center" where your whole team can inspect, query, and build on your data together.
The desktop app acts as the execution engine (your data never leaves your infrastructure), while Studio provides the shared dashboard layer.
I've also consistently posted devlogs on YT throughout the journey, which has helped build a community of ~1,400 subscribers who've shaped the product along the way.
Site: https://dbpro.app YouTube: https://youtube.com/@dbproapp
Would love feedback from anyone who's felt the pain of sharing database context across a team.
Instead of another social network, it’s a bundle of small, practical community tools under one umbrella, combining of the shelf-software with purpose-built projects of our own.
Our current areas of focus are
- help! a neighbor-to-neighbor help board (rides, errands, PC help, garden/handwork)
- hubs! for shared spaces / tool-sharing / events / social hubs
Right now I’m building the integration surface (claims, roles, provisioning), polishing onboarding, and trying to design help!/hubs! so they’re useful even with low activity.
If anyone’s done (hyper-)local community platforms: I’d love to hear what actually drove adoption and what did not work out for you.
Hi HN, I built this because I got tired of fighting with integrating payments in Africa.
M-Pesa processes over $300B annually, it's how 50+ million people in Kenya pay for everything from groceries to rent. People don't have bank accounts, but rather pay straight from their cell phone nummber. But integrating it into your app? That's a different story. Most developers spend weeks on what should take hours, it's almost impossible. And existing solutions for Mastercard, Paypal, Apple Pay etc are useless because most don't have bank accounts.
Micropay is essentially what Stripe did for credit cards, but for mobile money.
That's why people leave their jobs, and magically find they are 100% more productive without a boss. No BS, and they are inspired.
I think you could get further faster by being a human, being inspiring, being a leader. I think you could learn more from Nelson than whatever nasty dehumanising theory most bosses have been reading.
I'm struggling to find the motivation to write up my notes (neurodiversity both helping me see the problem and stopping me do anything about it). I'm struggling to name the theory. I am struggling ( with some limited success) in noticing what I do differently. I'm also struggling with recovering from a major burnout from succeeding creating highly motivated teams in really tough organisations.
I thought all along that I would be better with a collaborator watching me and noting the differences between what I do and what everyone else is doing, then interviewing me about it.
Maybe I could publish bits of it, little tidbits of blogs (who would find them?) or social media videos (I really don't want to have to record and edit videos). Not sure how to get progress.
I would really like people to try it out and report bugs, failures, and successes.
https://github.com/Vibecodelicious/opencode/blob/surgical_co...
I'm currently trying to get the LLM to be more proactive about removing content that is no longer useful in order to stay ahead of autocompaction and also just to keep the context window small and focused in general.
Supports VS Code, Neovim, IntelliJ/JetBrains Family, Zed, etc.
About to do the first beta release this later this week.
The protocol is "srcuri" (pronounced, "Sorcery")
This site is: https://srcuri.com/
Source code: https://github.com/browserup/sorcery-desktop
A high-performance 3D game engine and editor in Rust. It has the ability to deploy to WebAssembly and WebGL2, delivering console-quality visuals and near-native performance right in the browser.
Currently building a multiplayer cozy farming game, inspired by Animal Crossing. Reach out to our discord if you are interested in learning more: https://discord.com/invite/mHsQayQNdp
Some stats so far:
- 200 users
- 378 startup jobs
- 500+ posts
- 2800+ funding rounds
- 1700+ startup companies
- 5000+ investors
The next part of the project is Tech Posts Intel: a lead gen tool using statistical methods to predict which companies should have a funding round coming soon. I'm hoping to soft launch it this week.
I'd love to hear anyone's feedback on the website. Advice on how to get inbound links in 2026 would also be greatly appreciated!
Tech I'm using: Sprites, Cloudflare Workers, SQLite, Litestream, React SSR
The idea is you take a book you want to read, and it gets translated but also rewritten to match your current learning level. And as you read/listen it introduces new words to learn, reinforced by spaced repetition.
We're taking a trip to France this summer and I'm hoping to have something usable for at least a couple months before we go.
Currently working on the mechanics of extracting content from ebooks.
I train BJJ and kept hearing the same pain points from academy owners regarding attendance tracking, communications, missing payments, etc.
So I built a tool for martial arts academies in 2024 with belts progression, automated payments, attendance tracking, and a tablet check-in system. Nowadays I'm still onboarding new academies every week and working a bit more on the marketing side to keep growing.
I'll admit it's terrifying to share this here because I don't know how to keep costs under control. For now only myself and my friends have used it.
Also trying to make a podcast out of it, which I enjoy listening to while I do some road trips: https://open.spotify.com/show/1fFwWMWJBJYIZmyz9cnrKB
https://threeemojis.com/en-US/play/globs
It was inspired by 2025 by thomaswc, a 45x45 connections-like puzzle. Globs jumped off from there and it's been very fun to make. I have AI generating the puzzle groups and it keeps surprising me everyday with what it comes up with. I've got demos up for over 20 different languages, and many different sizes of puzzle. Just recently, I got the puzzle to be generated daily for American English, British English, High German and European Spanish. It can also do custom theme puzzles like the following:
Big YC https://threeemojis.com/en-US/play/globs/en-US/demo?size=big...
Jumbo HN https://threeemojis.com/en-US/play/globs/en-US/demo?size=jum...
There is still some bugs I am tracking down (open the page in a private browser if you hit stale data) but the game has really come together lately and been a lot of fun, I hope you all like it!
I've decided to do it simply because of my grandmother: she dislikes bracelets and smartwatches because they’re uncomfortable and she often forgets to wear them. A contactless device could be much more practical for her and for many people like her.
Multi-threaded WebAssembly in action for route optimization, all bundled with geocoding, OSM maps and routing, and provided world-wide.
We're adding driver's PWA, saving and sharing of route optimization projects, editing of optimized routes, sharing it with others either for execution or for approval, integrations and AI-assisted data imports, auth flows, support prompts, sales automation and all that boring stuff.
I just published the first episodes today and have zero listeners or subscribers, so it can only grow from here!
https://historyofthemajorityworld.com
Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4qJh2jNwMvWcLP1J1EMXxr?si=dcc7...
Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/rw/podcast/history-of-the-majorit...
- https://github.com/rumca-js/Internet-Places-Database - map of the Internet domains
- https://github.com/rumca-js/Internet-feeds - database of RSS feeds
- https://github.com/rumca-js/yafr - very simple RSS reader
- https://github.com/rumca-js/crawler-buddy - crawling project
- https://github.com/rumca-js/Django-link-archive - another RSS reader
The problem: if you use multiple AI tools (Claude, ChatGPT, Cursor, etc.), none of them know what the others know. You end up maintaining .md files, pasting context between chats, and re-explaining your project every time you start a new conversation. Power users spend more time briefing their agents than doing actual work.
Memory Store is an MCP server that ingests context from your workplace tools (Slack, email, calendar) and makes it available to any MCP-compatible agent. Make a decision in one tool, the others know. Project status changes, every agent is up to date.
We ran 35 in-depth user interviews and surveyed 90 people before writing a line of product code — 95% had already built workarounds for this problem (custom GPTs, claude.md templates, copy-paste workflows). The pain is real and people are already investing effort to solve it badly.
Early users are telling us things like one founder who tracked investor conversations through Memory Store and estimated talking to 4-5x more people because his agents could draft contextual replies without manual briefing. It helped close his round.
Live in beta now. Would love feedback from anyone who's felt this pain! :)
After one year of development, it's going better than I expected, so I'm considering building a demo to gather feedback and see if there's enough traction for working towards a Steam release.
Even if that's not the case though, it's been a blast learning about game dev in Unity/C#, as well as 3D modeling and animation in Blender!
Currently it has:
- Accurate recreation of Windows shell with start menu, taskbar, windowing system.
- Full desktop themes customization (color, cursor, sound, wallpaper, screensaver). All Win 98 default Plus! themes are included.
- Persistent local file system & mounting local folder as removable disk with ZenFS.
- Support playing Flash games and run DOS games (save game persisted). Yes, you can play Doom and copy your savegames to continue.
- Some accurate remakes of Windows 98 apps, some made by me (Solitaire games, Minesweeper, Notepad) some are existing ports (Pinball, JSPaint, Webamp, etc).
- Some other fun stuff
If you're interested in Windows 98, this is for you. You're also welcome to contribute or fork it to create your own version: https://github.com/azayrahmad/win98-web
Offline first, no tracking PWA for intermittent fasting and mindful eating. It helped me lose another 3 kg in January. Spiked a native iOS version, but I really like the simplicity of just the PWA. Not sure what's next!
--
Having done a lot of back and forth with LLMs and at the end throwing away learnings from a conversation felt so wasteful - reposit allows you to /share a summary of the valuable learning from your LLM chat for others to discover.
At the beginning of researching a problem, your agent can search reposit just like Context7 for docs. This way, even if you opt out of sharing your data with your LLM provider (as it's all or nothing), you can choose to publicise a solution to your problem with very little effort.
I'm working on extracting valuable learnings from open-source community projects as a starting point now (with attribution), as it probably needs a larger database to be valuable for users to install and use.
You can also self-host it and share privately within the company.
Started building it about a year ago after dealing with the same problem across multiple companies: circuit breakers scattered across dozens of services, each configured slightly differently, no single place to see what's happening when things go sideways. The existing options are either libraries you embed in every service (Resilience4j, opossum, etc.) leaving every server stateful, or going full service mesh which is overkill for most teams.
Openfuse gives you a central control plane for circuit breaker policies across your stack. You define your reliability rules in one place, get visibility into breaker states, and can react without redeploying anything.
Been a great project and I'm genuinely happy with where it landed. If you're running microservices or an integration-heavy monolith and have ever cursed at a cascading failure, I'd love to hear how you're handling it today! :)
Over two decades ago I was diagnosed with high blood pressure (for which am I have been on meds for about 15 years). I also have low platelets (red blood cells, basically means that I bruise easily and that small cuts don't heal fast). At any rate, I do blood tests on a regular basis to keep things in check. I have been keeping track of test results, weight and blood pressure result for nearly 20 years, but the data lives in a text file on my desktop. I wanted to build something more substantial for this for quite some time now, so, this is it.
This is part of a small hobby where I try to recreate aspects of old games myself to see how I would implement them. I eventually hope to have the skills to create the kind of game I miss playing when I was a kid 30 years ago.
I often have ideas, then spin cycles on starting the project, getting auth in place, making a marketing page, doing SEO, building and configuring pipelines for mobile app release, etc, etc.
My project builder just takes a name, a few configuration options (do you need payments? Analytics?) and spits out a templated build with Terraform that I can 1 (okay maybe 3) click deploy to GCP + App Stores.
The nice thing (I got help with Claude Code) is that now all my projects are in one place, I have a dashboard where I click in to and edit the code (with hot reloading - it deploys code-server and the applications in a small Kubernetes cluster, each project has its own pod) and when I am done editing I just click Deploy and it updates the "production" service in Cloud Run.
Not really interested in selling it as a service or anything (it's a bit too opinionated for that), but it's a very fun project to work on. I need to make Git + Versioning of the code work right now you only have a single copy of the code which isn't great!
7DTD is built on Unity Engine and modding is mostly done with XML/XPath and C#. I have yet to install Unity. I have a CLI setup, including a script to disassemble relevant 7DTD assembly DLLs into C# and copy other info from XML files into a directory in my repo.
This "refs" directory has about 800k lines of C# code and 300k lines of XML. Claude can figure out how to add a feature or fix a bug with a few minutes of searching the refs. At first it took 5-10 attempts to get results that actually worked, but now it's often 1-3.
Here are the mods I've released since early Jan:
- SteelUI: fixes for it to work with the latest game version[1]
- Smarter-Tools: a mod I authored from scratch to add a few tweaks to how tools work[2]
- More-Gore-Continued: has serious performance issues I'm working on - making progress[3] (adult only - requires sign-in)
If there's any interest I'm considering writing up all the details in an article and making the mod repos public.
[1]: https://www.nexusmods.com/7daystodie/mods/9386
Orange Juice
It’s been fun to come back to, most of the code I wrote still drives the business (it’s just far outdated).
I was pretty early on in my career when I wrote it, so seeing my mistakes and all the potential areas to improve has been very interesting. It’s like buying back your old high school Camaro that you used to wrench on.
How Home Alone My House - A fun app I'm making with my children using computer vision. The idea is I can scan the room with my camera before unwittingly walking into their traps and becoming a hapless adult who didn't pay close enough attention to tripping hazards and choke lines.
1. https://app.evvl.ai - a privacy focused Eval tool that you can download and compare outputs from different AI models (bring your own key)
2. https://dnsisbeautiful.com - an extremely clean and fast DNS lookup tool to track propagation across the different networks.
3. https://finalfinalreallyfinaluntitleddocumentv3.com/ - this is a Mac only file renaming tool (you drag and drop "screenshot1.png" onto it and it renames it to "dns-results.png" for you via local AI models. Though in true side project fashion the site looks kind of borked at the moment.
I built a scraper that pulls every job posting from the Who's Hiring thread, runs it through DeepSeek to parse the unstructured text into a uniform schema (role, company, location, remote, salary, stack), and presents them in a searchable/filterable UI. I know tools like this exist but I couldn't find one with the filtering and UI I actually wanted, so I built it myself.
Stack: FastAPI + Next.js + PostgreSQL, containerized on AWS ECS Fargate with an ALB. Frontend on Amplify. This is honestly my first real AWS deployment and I don't ever want to do this again. ECS alone took me a solid day to figure out. I also can't get amplify to use the domain I bought even though I set all of the DNS records up :/
Email notifications are still being worked on so right now it's just a view of all the job postings. Job match notifications and saving jobs should be up soon.
I would love feedback on the job matching and UI in the meantime (especially if you find a bug). Happy to answer questions or hear how you'd approach the AWS side differently!
Inspired by a TED talk I saw [0] where the researcher from Microsoft displayed a program with AI assisting with thinking while someone was reading and annotating a document. They claimed it was a way to sharpen critical thinking instead of killing it. They didn't release the product, but I figured it was cool and useful, so I've spent the weekend creating it. It's been a great way for me to practice using agents, and I've learned a lot from this process.
Hosted OpenClaw, one click and you get a full agent with configurable skills, channels and the whole thing, all running in its own sandbox.
I love OpenClaw but setting it up is a pain: VPS, Docker, API keys in plaintext, security patches... So I’ve spent the last couple weeks building a hosted version that handles all of that. Each user gets their own isolated environment on Cloudflare Workers.
Still doing some testing with friends before opening signups but planning to launch properly this week.
Would love feedback on the landing page in the meantime!
Month 2 of building the SQL client I've always wished I had.
One feature I'm especially proud of is the visual query builder. Drag & drop to build SQL queries.
There's also an entire SQL tutorial section for anyone who wants to learn or refresh SQL knowledge.
I was hit by a big wave of depression last year. That crisis gave me a couple of periods of hyperfocus, and I thought I might as well use them to try to improve my mind and my ability to reason.
I haven't had good results learning certain subjects, like CS/math, with Anki or other flash card systems. The only thing that ever seemed to work for me was doing a lot of problems with pencil and paper. But without problems exercising those tools or techniques, they tended to just evaporate from my mind.
So my idea was to combine spaced repetition and problem presentation, and create a system for generating problems and validating their solutions randomly and parametrically. So successive presentations of the same card would present a different problem... and the overall effect would hopefully be that you learn the invariants that each card is trying to present, instead of memorizing some combination of variables and values. Sort of MathAcademy but for CS.
I _think_ it's feature-complete at this point, though I'm still working on validating and publishing cards (and there are a couple of things I wanna do to improve security). I'm pretty early in the dogfooding process, and I'm still the only person using it, and there are definitely bugs. But if anyone would like to try it out, I'd be delighted to hear your feedback (email in profile, also on site). Just maybe go a little easy on me right now, lol :/
The Boolean Logic and Lambda Calculus subjects are free forever, and the first topic of each other subject is also free, so if you're intrigued you can use it for quite some time (literally months) before even needing to provide an email address. No need to pay for anything.
It's a bit like Reddit but focused on learning. (Doom learning instead of doom scrolling)
You 1) upload a source 2) direct the kind of questions you want to be asked 3) start answering (and if you get the answers wrong, you can discuss the problem with "AI").
You can read other people's sources, questions, answers and their discussions with AI too.
And if you're learning the same thing as other people, you can join communities to share sources/questions.
It's still very early on, so I'm very interested in any feedback.
We’re aiming to build the best typing application; personalized to every users typing habits.
Typing is one of the most important hard skills today and yet most education systems skip it.
Most of our customers are adults who always wanted to type but can’t find the time. We make it faster to learn and improve by focusing around the user’s weak points (with our features like SmartPractice and TargetPractice)
https://www.higherscoresdfs.com/dfs/spa/welcome/
Here is the pitch.
We seek to empower DFS fans through education about predicting professional sports athlete outcomes. We do that through strategy advice, hot player tips, optimized lineups, and pick’em style game-friendly player props. We're not trying to take away your control or do your thinking for you. We are just here to support you in making better decisions. Let the app do the number crunching so you can get back to competitive play that gets results and is also fun.
It is currently in beta. Will be adding barcode scanning and other features pretty soon.
Another tool I built recently is a dashboard to provide a single view for web and social stats. Currently integrate Clicky stats (via their API). Next in line is Google Search Console and social integration.
https://kashifaziz.me/portfolio/multi-tenant-analytics-dashb...
The app is here: https://app.midway.travel (still in beta!) The landing page is here: https://www.midway.travel
The insight: points close together in embedding space are semantically similar. So lasso a cluster, ask questions about it, refine your selection, repeat.
Built with Svelte 5 and DuckDB WASM for fast spatial queries. Everything runs client-side—your data never leaves the browser. It is based on Apple Embeddings Atlas
The vision is turning these visual selections into API endpoints that agents can query programmatically.
Looking for suggestions and feedback!
This is not the first championship in branch prediction, but real-world design constraints have never been seriously considered before (How long does it take to produce a prediction? How much energy does it consume?). We wrote a new C++ library which uses operator overloading to track the latency/energy used by math operations as the predictor predicts. In addition to computation, this library models registers, RAMs, etc. The championship is open to everyone - documentation, a tutorial, etc. are on our website/repository to help you get started!
WIP language spec: https://gist.github.com/Heathcorp/13fcd206fdc38ca6ce001f32ef...
Writing the compiler/solver in Rust with no AI assistance because this is a learning project.
- A bracelet with tiny camera that's pointed at your hand palm and transmits pictures of the stuff you're holding and where you've put it down locally to your phone. Pictures are sent to a quantized CLIP which allows you to search for anything you've lost without needing to attach an airtag to it. Works decently well and is great for 'power losers' like those with ADHD-I. Has a privacy slider and nothing goes to the cloud.
Would love to hear from anyone interested > hi @ hitch-home dot com
Currently implemented the following:
- Automated scale in / scale out of nodes for Spark executors and drivers via Karpenter
- Jupyter notebook integration that works as a Spark driver for quick iteration and prototyping
- A simple JSON based IAM permissions managementent via AWS Parameter Store
Work-in-progress this month:
- Jupyterhub based Spark notebook provisioning
- Spark History Server
- Spark History Server MCP support with chat interface to support Spark pipeline debugging and diagnostics
Open to feedback and connecting. Docs at https://docs.orchestera.com/
- https://github.com/desplega-ai/qa-use CLI to control browsers and tests locally, coding agent friendly - https://github.com/desplega-ai/agent-swarm OSS agent swarm that can be deployed with docker compose using Claude - https://desplega.ai platform that supports qa-use backend
Cheers!
https://apps.apple.com/us/app/skyscraper-for-bluesky/id67541...
Been a side project for a few months, as I wasn't enjoying the official client, and wanted something that fit my particular tastes (scroll position permanence, greater emphasis on hashtags, support for Shortcuts, and a more iOS-native look and feel).
Launched 3 weeks today, and already nearing 100 subscribers (nearly all annual, but month-to-month also available). Been very fun seeing users start using the app each and every day!
Here is a demo link:
https://memovee.com/platform/demo?guest_account_id=019c481b-...
Try queries like:
- "Top 10 movies of 2024, sort by highest rating first"
- "Top 10 zombie apocalypse movies"
- "Find me some good movies that take place in space, no horrors please"
- "Some good movies that will make me appreciate life"
- "Find me movies like Bladerunner"
Or whatever else you can think of. You can also tell it to "filter out movies with less than 300 votes sort by highest rating first" etc...
I’ve been suffering from migraines for the past few years and wanted a dead simple way to log when they happen, as well as any other contributing factors I could think of. Inspired by the simplicity of spreadsheets, I built a grid of events, and as you tap on cells, you log “dots”. Those dots, over time, reveal patterns.
I’ve already identified several contributing factors to my migraine triggers using it. It’s been so genuinely useful I wanted to share it with others hoping they might also benefit.
The next big release is coming out later this week which includes visualizations, charts, and on-device analysis of your journal to provide insights.
Working on migration from Modal to a single nvidia jetson, to do low-cost monitoring of toxic emissions at the local tata steel plant. Ran this pro bono for the last 2 years, the fun is in getting this as cheap as possible but still with good accuracy
Building a SSTV ios app - you can encode images in sound and transmit these over (ham) radio. The ISS regularly broadcasts these too. And building a multi-user IRC-like chatroom over audio. Hook up your mac or ipad to a voice radio channel, and chat over very slow (31 baud) but very resilient links.
Kinda like HN meets Pocket.
It includes a Chrome extension to easily tag, save & share pages.
Currently the front page is all the pages I find interesting (AI/Startup related).
Would love any feedback or feature requests!
Recovery from that is not something one can easily handle. It's a long slow and usually painful recovery process that requires deep commitment.
Many of us have experienced burn out.. but some of us have seen worse. Engineering truly can lead you to places that both matter a great deal and remind use we were never enough, we were just the people there at the time. Longer I am in this career the more humble I get as each successive challenge hammers me into something different than I was before.
I love it. But god ... sometimes the choose your own adventure goes awry.
It allows chatting with AI in the context of any Telegram chat (at the moment, using the last 30 messages in the current chat).
The Completions API endpoint is fully configurable, so you can plug in most cloud LLM providers or run against a local model.
And we just made our first release today: https://github.com/fedorn/telebrain/releases/tag/v6.5.1
- After Actions (https://www.afteractions.net/) - The company I work for pays for retrospective software, and I figured I could make my own. So I did! Good for agile retrospective ceremonies
- Data Atlas (https://www.data-atlas.net/) - Right now, it's a basic JSON Schema form builder with a UI on top, but I intend to expand it and improve it to be more than that this year.
I've been working on a BuddhaBoard-like app and a few other projects, but nothing I'm prepared to share right now. Maybe next month :D
Approaching the home stretch for a first 1.0 preview release, including: support for parsing Parquet files with flat and nested schemas, all physical and logical column types, core and advanced encodings, projections, compression, multi-threading, etc. all that with a pretty decent performance.
Next on the roadmap are SIMD support, predicate push-down (bloom filters, statistics, etc.), writer support.
You pick keywords and sources (news sites, blogs, YouTube, communities), and it sends you a summary on a schedule you set. Basically Google Alerts but it actually reads the content and gives you a digest instead of a list of links.
Built it because I was spending 30+ min/day manually checking the same sites for industry news. Now it's a 3-minute read every morning.
It's free to start if anyone here does this kind of monitoring.
If you want to kick the tires, you an deploy a CloudFormation stack to a Sandbox AWS account - see https://trailtool.io/install.html
You know that feeling when your microcontroller crashes and you spend 3 hours staring at cryptic registers trying to figure out why? Yeah, I got tired of that.
So I built an MCP server that lets Claude talk directly to GDB. Now instead of manually decoding CFSR registers, I just ask "why did it crash?" and get back "division by zero at line 142 in calculate_average()".
It's pretty satisfying to watch Claude diagnose a deadlock between two RP2040 cores in 10 seconds - something that would've ruined my entire afternoon.
Just shipped v0.1.0: https://github.com/ezulabs/embeddedgdbmcp
It will have personal articles about contemporary tech topics such as escaping algorithms, anti AI art, electronica/raves blogging, and the intersection between tech and art. It'll have Y2K/liminal/surreal/computer aesthetics and appear as an early 2000s blog.
It's very time consuming but I'm ecstatic building it all from scratch.
I’m building a tool to help teams decide if they should keep burning cash on AWS/GCP or buy their own GPU clusters.
It takes real workload parameters (tokens/sec, model size, duty cycle) and models throughput/utilization to find the break-even point. The core diagnostic is free, and I generate a board-ready PDF report for $99 to help justify the CapEx/OpEx switch to CFOs.
Building this solo from Switzerland. I’d love to hear from anyone dealing with "cloud exit" for AI or struggling with GPU cost projections.
So I built Tasty A.F. — paste a recipe URL, and it uses AI to extract the essentials and format them onto a clean, printable notecard.
How it works:
1. Paste any recipe URL
2. AI scrapes the recipe and generates a concise 3x5 card
3. Print it, stick it on the fridge or a notecard, and cook
Built with Python/Flask and the Anthropic Claude API, hosted on Railway.
I'm an physician who previously had wrist tendinosis and carpal tunnel and made the keyboard for myself. I'm trying to get the keyboard registered as a medical device for treatment of hand/wrist repetitive strain injury. Currently getting design for manufacturing finalized, and waiting on injection mold prototypes. Hoping to launch on Kickstarter in the next few months.
Also concurrently waiting on ethics approval for a clinical study, which will happen after launch. We had quite promising results from user testing, so I'm cautiously optimistic about the study.
Trying to be much more though. Creates an abstraction over all the music streaming services so you can share playlists with anyone, regardless of what subscription they have.
Still many things to add/polish before moving to the next planned measurements: estimates of buffering/serialization/transmission times, BGP flapping events, some weird conditions that I've noticed and would like to flag, and proper display of loops.
Will probably attempt another show-HN when I'm happy with that.
The goal is a milspec, zero-trust autonomous agent that can be completely locked down. I'm also tying the agent's heartbeat into activitywatch so it can be a good personal assistant and do stuff for you pre-emptively based on your stated goals and session activity.
Built it because I kept seeing SMBs get stuck between two bad options: paying enterprise prices for tools like Security Hub + Config rules (which can easily hit $2-5K/mo on a mid-size account) or just flying blind. There wasn't much in between for engineering teams that need to pass audits but don't have a dedicated security person.
Early stage, actively getting first customers. Would love feedback from anyone managing AWS security at a smaller org.
Different RSS clients provide different filtering options, and lots of them limit you to a few keywords and/or put them behind a $7-12/mo subscription. I'm building Sponder so you can curate what you see, and it just presents another RSS feed, so you can keep using your favorite client but fill in the feature gaps.
Right now it can merge and filter by string or regex, and next I'm building (because it's what I want) history replay and smarter podcast rerun detection. it's new and I'm very open to feedback and feature requests.
It’s a special UIKit map package, designed to be integrated into SwiftUI, as map support is a big SwiftUI Achilles heel.
I have integrated it into another package (a SwiftUI admin tool, that isn’t public), and it works exactly as I planned.
I often do this kind of thing. If I can break some module out of my work, and publish it, I spend the extra time, polishing and documenting it. No one else really cares, but it forces me to do a really good job, so I get an extremely high-Quality component, that I don’t have to worry about, later.
Initial results are promosing Extracting the text and figuring out which lines belong to the same paragraph and then try to map those to the original positions in the PDF...
I built it because most scrobblers only keep track of Apple Music or Spotify plays, but I have streaming stations on all day long, or the radio is on, and those never make it into my playing charts or recommendations etc.
Early days, more to come, public beta is ongoing, and I am looking for testers :)
Shamelessly attracting new monthly sponsors and people willing to buy me the occasional pizza with my crappy HTML skills.
It's a free macOS app written in Swift that allows you to type with your voice. It supports local models and BYOK (Bring Your Own Key) with a bunch of providers.
You can assign different models and post-processing steps to polish the text. For example, I have a setup for Obsidian that transforms my voice into clean, formatted Markdown. Or, when I use it inside VS Code, it switches to the Parakeet V3 instant local model.
The idea is to get tons of reps in, across varied situations, with excellent advice to build good intuitions and decision making abilities. Or to stop making bad or terrible decisions. Or just play poker for free.
I'd like to monetize with at least the hand history format open sourced. Ping me if you would like to get involved with GTM and the revenue side of things.
It's a daily puzzles website focused on logic puzzles at this moment. I have about 70 subscribers, and it's online since Dec/25.
I used to work in devrel, and traveled a lot for events, and I always struggled skipping things like workouts, looking at the time on the last day of a conference trying to check whether it's time to leave yet - so this gives me the opportunity to build a tool I would have loved to use.
Currently I'm working on a LLM-powered booking email parser, that ingests forwarded booking confirmations and adds flights, hotels, etc. to your itinerary.
I have always hated how we deal with feature flags; often times as a dev I implement it, but then business decides how the flags are used, which comes back to us having to set them. I want to make this something that can be used by both easily, and priced fairly - looking at how much others charge for a feature flag SaaS is insane.
Currently I'm in heavy testing by myself, as I am quite worried about issues (that's just my personality), but yeah. It started as a normal side project for me to train a bit, then I added a bit of agentic coding to it to also learn it, and now it's here.
After around 15 years working with clients and helping them wrangle their WordPress sites, I stopped working with WordPress as a primary platform for building sites.
A while back I've switched to a more modern stack and have fully abandoned WordPress.
Having that background, however, I've come to know (way too well) many of the frustrations and security problems with the WordPress ecosystem. As a result, I started a service to help business owners break free from WordPress on to a more modern Next.js-powered stack that's faster, lighter weight, and easier for them to manage.
Brand new but should be fun!
Specifically its a remake knowing what we know now having finished the two trilogies.
Instead of the three hands and the moving needle, its just one moving needle. Its made from wood and aluminium. The reason for aluminium is that in the 1920s (roughly the age that these books are set) is a wonder material, a bit like carbon fibre/titanium is now.
I have the working mechanism (controlled by 8mm steppers) I need to finish the case and dial, and paint it. I also need to shrink the controlling mechanism and design the voice->text->inference->output to 36 symbols logic.
- Kardy - send group cards - https://www.kardy.app
- Jello - Create & customize popular games - https://www.jello.app
I was wasting way to much time scrolling news. It consist of a crawling engine, de-duplication, llm creating a custom keyword filter and each event is checked against the original prompt for verification using a llm before sending it out.
Keywords suck, 381 of 388 potential matches end up like this:
"The event is about an OpenClaw Plugin Hub supply chain attack, not a data breach affecting hundreds of millions of users. The watch request specifies a massive data breach; the event does not clearly indicate that."
Up to date and has examples for all of the major foundation model providers (OpenAI, Anthropic, Google, and AWS Bedrock). Goes through basics of calling the API, structured outputs, RAG, and MCP/Agents. Also has a chapter on the LLM coding tools (Copilot, Claude Code, and Antigravity).
My thoughts are that this is a perfect model for running locally on an iPhone in a recipe-management app.
Wrote a blog about what I learned while finetuning it https://vladr.com/blog/posts/finetuning-gemma3-to-extract-re...
And published the model on HF https://huggingface.co/v-rusu/recipe-extractor
It basically is a client side web app that adds "shot on" watermarks / photo frames with camera metadata from EXIF data. Also have film simulations like filters to elevate you photo.
Started with just upload + edit, recently trying to add camera mode (think Daze app but in browser). But already hitting some issues when rendering Canvas on live camera feed, might explore WebGL to get real-time filtering working smoothly.
Gata is an open source automated L1 ticket triage tool for Zendesk. It costs pennies per ticket for it to route tickets to the correct team.
During development I was regularly seeing over 90% accuracy. The average for humans is 60-80%.
The whole thing runs in your AWS account.
There's more information in the release announcement - https://www.proactiveops.io/archive/meet-gata-the-automated-...
By embedding realistic decoy routes and honey fields that are difficult to distinguish from real API constructs, attackers are nudged to authenticate — converting reconnaissance into actionable security telemetry.
github: https://github.com/trappsec-dev/trappsec
docs: https://trappsec.dev
You record short morning, evening, or ad hoc sessions, and it transcribes and indexes them into a searchable archive of your thinking. It uses simple Apple Fitness–style rings to encourage consistency, plus monthly insight reports and suggested “build in public” posts.
I built it because notes apps weren’t capturing my thinking in full fidelity. Using Reflect I averaged ~65k words per year. With Historic I logged ~85k words in one month.
Your thoughts are already your most valuable asset. Historic just makes them accessible.
The transmit site is in the Verdugo hills and will need to be off grid. We're going to need about $20k to get the entire transmit system setup (including a solar/battery backup system).
I've also been working on our web infrastructure. The site is built with Haskell and HTMX. The stream is Icecast, and stream scheduling is done using an internal schedule system in the web app and LiquidSoap (so no external tools like airtime, libretime, or azuracast).
You can try the editor here (no signup required): https://app.breadboards.io/playgrounds/weather
And here is a live app exported from it: https://late-cat-2043.breadboards.app
Inspired by Robin Debreuil his process and videos (see video the article and several forum posts). He is using a CNC but I figured regulating pressure is more important then depth, therefore my experiments with the plotter.
Currently dialing in the pressure/speed and amount of passes on a single layer copper board.
[0] https://hackaday.com/2020/07/10/making-pcbs-the-easy-way/
If you want to see a video of the app without sign up https://thaicopilot.com/how-it-works
It is fully customizable, works on any social media, and it genuinely brought my screen time to less than 1 hour.
It is free to use for one platform, and is $29.99/yr for unlimited. And if you need the premium version but can't afford it, just send me a message and I'll sort you out.
App Store link: https://apps.apple.com/us/app/id6737515680
It's inspired by a moment a few years ago when I realized I had no history of what I had worked on in the past.
It let's you quickly get answers to questions like:
- What did I work on last week? - What was that one hacker new post about compiler optimization that I forgot to bookmark last week?
And it has MCP support so it plays well with Claude.
I've used it recently to target specific job applications by adjusting my resume based on what the job application is looking for and what I've worked on in the past... Claude one shots this (because it has context from Memex). And it feels amazing!
Also, the name Memex comes from Vannevar Bush's 1945 article "As We May Think". He originally thought of as a device in which individuals would compress and store all of their books, records, and communications, "mechanized so that it may be consulted with exceeding speed and flexibility". The individual was supposed to use the memex as an automatic personal filing system, making the memex "an enlarged intimate supplement to his memory".
And he created a word - memex - which is a portmanteau of "memory" and "index".
The wikipeida entry here has more information: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Memex
It's been a slow start for me. But now, between the cli interface and the MCP connection with Claude I find that I'm starting to use it instead of:
- Bookmarks - Lists / Bug Tracking
And even more exciting it's unlocking capabilities that I didn't have before:
- Can ask Claude to review the last week of work and remind me of things that I might still need to do - Can prevent randomization when someone asks me how to configure a server that I set up a month ago. Now I just ask claude and it checks in Memex. And I can send over a nice .md file
It's a modern, powerful, and user-friendly web interface for managing and monitoring ClickHouse databases. It provides a comprehensive suite of tools for developers, analysts, and administrators to interact with their ClickHouse clusters efficiently.
- Effective and Native RBAC: Use ClickHouse grants to control the data access and UI permissions. - Discover - Flexible, Kibana-like data exploration for any table granted access. - SQL Console, Monitoring and Logging, ... all in just one place.
UPSC Civil Services exam is one of the most coveted exams in India (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Civil_Services_Examination). I created the platform which has indexed mock test copies of people who are now officers for the Indian Govt.
Now I am building additional features that make the prep slighly easier. The platform is already live and is being used by several thousand aspirants.
Let me know if you have any feedback! Thank you
While it's true that the agentic coding assistant space is crowded (Claude Code, Aider, Opencode, Codex, etc.), we needed something supporting both local and cloud models that we could easily modify/extend for custom workflows.
Being able to access the agent through both a terminal and a Python API/REPL has come in handy.
Recent releases includes custom tools, agent skills, and built-in support for Ralph Wiggum loops.
A developer platform for AI image generation that includes observability, with fine-tuned vision models as a judge to monitor production traffic. (Still working on the last part.)
We also have a model arena and showdown page that ranks models by task, so you can find the best model for e.g. making infographics: https://lumenfall.ai/leaderboard
We just launched the MVP. Tech stack is Rails for the dashboard and Cloudflare Workers (Typescript / Hono) for the gateway.
Imagine you, as a security researcher (or any other persona in the security field), wanted to see what prior works are available around bypassing v8 sandbox using webasm, or if what’s been done or found targeting deserialization in Go.
Using this web app, you can search the indexed and tagged write ups.
Also adding MCP support to it so your agents can search too.
Hopefully going live soon.
P.S: I said HN-like, but tbh it’s just the UI that looks a bit like HN (I’m not a good designer, so got heavy inspiration from HN listing style), otherwise there’s no other overlap in functionality yet.
I added Linux kernel 6.x support for a cheap USB Wifi adapter I bought on AMZN.
I find quantum mechanics fascinating and wanted a better way to play with it. Linear types prevent copying qubits, effects track what's quantum vs pure. The type system catches mistakes that would otherwise blow up at runtime.
Runs on a local simulator (with various qubit types modelled) or IBM hardware (sort of). Still a research and learning language for me - I break things regularly.
If any real quantum physicists are lurking, Id love to hear what Ive got wrong!
Restful Atmos lamp: a circadian bedtime lamp that automatically shifts from energizing light during the daytime to low-blue light at night. Units are inbound, shipping in March.
[0]: https://restfullighting.com/products/bedtime-bulb-v2
[1]: https://restfullighting.com/products/restful-atmos-preorder
So i'm trying to help myself by building the tool that would have helped me and running it as a company in its own right.
Its all a bit meta.
Take a look, its in beta, need waitlist joins and people willing to test.
Cheers, N
Trying to parse, model the HMR process, and storing the data as flat as possible and doing it from relation design first, has been a pleasant process.
Im hoping it works for react devs easily, and then I guess I'll try to learn angular to see if that would not be helpful for them too.
I mostly want to help my old coworkers maintaining my old crazy code with a visual helper.
https://memelang.net/ https://arxiv.org/abs/2512.17967 https://github.com/memelang-net/memesql10/blob/main/memelang...
I was frustrated by the process of searching for clinical trial info using the clunky and slow registry websites. So I aggregated all trials around the world and made the search faster. Additional features:
- You can watch a trial and get email updates
- Sometimes a trial is done and a paper published, but no updates to the official page. I try to find these papers and link them
- I try to link trials with the same drug together, showing the drug going through different phases
Chess67 is a platform for chess coaches, clubs and tournament organizers to manage their operations in one place. It handles registrations, payments, scheduling, rosters, lessons, memberships, and tournament files (TRF/DBF) while cutting out the usual mix of spreadsheets and scattered tools. I’m focused on solving the practical workflow problems coaches deal with every day and making it easier for local chess communities to run events smoothly.
- I see a lot error propagation with CUAs
- A GUI is very flakey and it produces a lot action latency
- There're hidden states behind each screen that CUAs simply can't capture
- Token consumption is absurd (but I guess this will alleviate as LLMs get cheaper)
What do you guys think? Any good ideas what'd be a good counter to this?
Started with Rust, then swapped to Swift to cut the dependencies right down.
[1]: https://github.com/sjparkinson/geforcenow-awdl0
[2]: https://uncomplicated.systems/2026/02/08/geforcenow-macos
Over the past year, we’ve seen AI systems hallucinate in courts, leak internal prompts, get manipulated by praise, or make decisions they were never meant to make.
Most discussions focus on:
better models
alignment
prompt design
But I’m starting to think many of these failures aren’t intelligence issues at all.
They’re governance issues.
In most real systems, we separate:
capability from permission
intelligence from authority
generation from action
AI systems often skip this and let agents act by default, then try to clean up afterward with filters.
Curious how others here think about:
eligibility checks before AI actions
graduated authority for agents
limiting influence rather than outputs
system-level governance outside the model
Is anyone building or experimenting with this kind of control layer?
DarkRadiant is open source, cross platform level editor for The Dark Mod and other idTech4 games like Doom 3, Quake 4 and Prey. It is a lot of fun to add features that make level designers more productive. I would like to invite anyone that is curious about wxWidgets, CSG and game dev to join us.
If you are a designer, we could definitely use a new icon set.
I've been pretty bummer out by Rainbow 6 Siege X announcing they will never support Linux due to a lack of kernel-level anti-cheat support. While I can use NVIDIA shield to play from my Windows pc, id rather play something natively with friends (for context, we usually play 3v3's for funsies.
My goal is not to make an exact clone, but to make a smaller map version for 3v3 that is a bit more quick paced.
For context, it's a bomb defusal game where the main goal is intel and gadgets. You need to make the other side waste their gadgets so it comes down to a gun v gun fight.
A Windows 95-themed interactive guide on agentic AI coding, with a hidden SkiFree game, original chiptune soundtrack, achievement badges, and a Red Pill / Blue Pill choice that can BSOD your browser. Seven chapters with a codebase readiness scorer, ROI calculator, and copyable artifacts for engineering leads.
Built entirely with Claude Code, which is fitting since the guide teaches the same workflow. It's a labor of love that happens to be made with the tool it's about.
It looks inside each file to see what it’s about, then suggest the right folder for you.
Everything happens on your Mac, so nothing leaves your computer. No clouds, no servers.
It works in 50 languages (including English, German, French, Spanish, Swedish) and with images (OCR and object recognition), PDFs, Microsoft Office, ePubs, text, Markdown, and many other file types.
For messy folders anywhere on the Mac, Floxtop can help.
It's designed to integrate with Maven projects, to bring in the benefits of tools like Gradle and Bazel, where local and remote builds and tests share the same cache, and builds and tests are distributed over many machines. Cache hits greatly speed up large project builds, while also making it more reliable, since you're not potentially getting flaky test failures in your otherwise identical builds.
Fresh off the press
You can bookmark a job description (it will be parsed), then paste a question and it generates an answer based on your resume, the job description, and your previously given answers for similar questions in other applications. The generated answer can be refined through a follow-up chat and exported as a PDF. It also works as a simple job application tracker.
Saves me tons of time and effort every day!
https://www.fusio-project.org Fusio an open source API & AI management platform to build and manage APIs and MCP tools.
https://typehub.cloud TypeHub an open platform to design and version API specifications.
https://sdkgen.app SDKgen a tool to generate client SDKs and server stubs supporting multiple languages.
70k LOC. Deployed on Nas. Superpowered with AI for daily recaps. Looks like any modern commercial SaaS.
I'm also experimenting with coverage-guided PBT input generation in the same library, AFL-style -- right now elm-test only has random input generation.
Engineering hiring has changed. Too much noise, too many interviews, and grunt work your developers hate. Candidates use LLMs during interviews while interviewers are stuck with the same methods from five years ago.
We are solving these problems at https://fairground.work/
I hope to add ai data tools & saas, but really I'm just happy to have a running working live setup on my small farming plot ready for the growing season - https://benb0jangles.github.io/Remote-greenhouse-monitor/
https://github.com/storytold/artcraft
It's not like ComfyUI - it focuses on frontier models like Higgsfield or OpenArt do, and it is structurally oriented rather than node graph based.
Here's what that looks like (skip to halfway down the article):
Demo + sample deliverables: www.V3pi.com
and also Backseat Writer, a creative writing text editor that uses AI to impersonate your audience and give you feedback https://backseat-writer.vercel.app/demo which is more of an anchor for my own writing practice than anything else, but I find it fun
- Building a Retool/Looker alternative for internal tools so non-technical teams can build their own without creating busywork for engineers. - Works like Lovable/Replit with two differences: Got 3,000 integrations out of the box through Pipedream SDK and got access controls in place with embedded auth, backend (django) and database
[0]: https://github.com/zikani03/basi [1]: https://code.zikani.me/using-the-zig-built-lightpanda-browse...
It helps to consolidate data from multiple sources, "slice & dice" data instantly from big picture overviews to smaller details like having a split screen. Basically extremely customisable tool.
On top of that, there's a marketplace where developers can build and monetise add-ons.
BlockWatch - a language agnostic linter that keeps your code, documentation, and configuration in sync and enforces strict formatting and validation rules.
It helps you avoid broken docs and messy config files by enforcing rules directly in your comments. You can link code to documentation, enforce sorting order, ensure uniqueness, and validate code with Regex or AI.
It works with most major languages.
I’m working on tabularis, a lightweight desktop database management tool designed for developers. It provides a modern interface for managing MySQL/MariaDB, PostgreSQL, and SQLite databases through a native desktop application. Built using Tauri v2 (Rust backend) and React 19 (TypeScript frontend), it offers native performance while maintaining the flexibility of web technologies.
I’m working on:
- DietPDF ( https://github.com/Zigazou/dietpdf-haskell ) an intensive PDF optimizer which tries to reduce PDF size as best as it can while preserving visual quality. It relies on a lot of tricks to achieve this goal (minification, precision reduction, deletion of superfluous operations, concatenations, filter combination etc.). At the present moment, I'm trying to implement CCITT Fax encoding/decoding.
- https://moav.sh/ - https://github.com/shayanb/MoaV
Basically a one command installation of 8+ protocols with easy user management.
My idea is to make it easy to run your own battle tested VPN server for yourself (when traveling or not) and your family and friends. Pretty useful in national internet shutdown situations
It helps sales teams find companies that use any product/technology, but not limited to frontend tecnologies.
So for instance, you can find companies that use Canva: https://bloomberry.com/data/canva/ or Cursor: https://bloomberry.com/data/cursor/
However had, on my semi-immediate todo list in the future are:
- improvements to the scripts I use to compile software from source; I want to be able to build a complete LFS/BLFS without any interaction (I know there is AFLS but I don't like the format or restrictions; I literally want to be able to do everything here via actionable scripts at every moment in time, including using git sources rather than old releases)
- continue on the unified widgets project (e. g. use oldschool GUIs but also for the web "GUIs"). Describe once, run anywhere, in any programming language. This is obviously way too much for a single person, so I mostly want to get the foundation right, prototype primarily in ruby, then add python and java to it. The "end format" should be for normal people, e. g. they should be able to describe everything in one format, and then have that be the basis for every GUI.
- continue working with regard to bioinformatics, also with a focus on normal people (non-tech savvy people). Most bioinformatics software was written by math-heavy tech-centric people, which makes sense. It's not trivial to work with that (we have AI to work around this to some extent, but I feel that many people who use AI don't understand the underlying components; I kind of want something like a Linux from Scratch for all bioinformatics-centric software. Like not just use it but full and useful explanations that are not too technical, but also not too overly long.)
Hopefully gem.coop becomes a viable alternative to rubygems.org - I hate the corporate identity rubygems.org adopted (and you can see the fall-out in other areas, e. g. Heroku dying right now, which kind of means ruby will die too, if all use cases are eroded despite the pro-corporate focus RubyCentral embraced). Unfortunately things seem to become worse in general - I was hoping LadyBird would be a real competitor. The moment you make any statement that they perceive as "criticism" is the moment their code of conduct kicks in and locks you out. And that's not even after a first release; imagine how they will operate once people come in with complaints about LadyBird having problems.
The world wide web used to be a LOT more open in the past.
We need to reduce the entry barrier (it's meant for companies so it needs explicit registration) so anyone can use it as a proper SaaS but so far we already have a couple clients :D
Current work has been improving boot time. Was nearly two minutes because of one board, and that's a long time for the lights to be out if you have to reboot during a show. I'd wanted to use buildroot to get a custom kernel that should boot much more quickly, but the buildroot learning curve was steep for me, particularly as I've no expectation of ever needing the knowledge again.
Independently but concurrently I decided I really ought to understand what all this AI stuff was about, for fear of getting left behind. That coincided with the release of opus 4.5, and holy heck has it made a difference! With a little guidance from me Claude got the buildroot environment working and the boot time down to less than 10 seconds. I've been _really_ impressed. I've had Claude write a few boring utilities that I could easily have done but Claude managed much faster and with less boredom on my part. Fortunately for my AI revolution I think I'm a better Business Analyst/writer than I am a coder, so it fits with my temperament.
This is a follow up to an idea I had years ago https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=13022649, which is now semi-automated (with lots of manual curation as the last step).
The biggest challenges:
- how to organize all this info in a nice way
- where to find more time to read all the gems I've found so far :)
UPD: formatting
- Life’s Articles, a personal Wikipedia
- Counting Worms, a very fast calorie tracker
- BookTalk, a audio based reading companion for capturing annotations
- Kindle Blocker, a Chrome Extension that earns you minutes on websites by reading with the Kindle app
Initial results have been surprising in that even when using structured output, some of the generated json schema breaks the generation process in a way that syntactically invalid json is returned.
I'm working through major providers to determine which are stable enough to rely on.
The end goal is to generate strings confirming to non-json grammars for common formats like CSV, SQL, Python, sed, regex, etc.
StockStreaks (https://stockstreaks.com) - Hot and cold streak data for stocks [2]
---
[1] more info here: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46637349
[2] I broke the pipeline over the weekend when adding new metrics, but you can still see the main idea
-> host your own custom domains and plug existing email sources with privacy;
-> share mailboxes with teammates and AI agents without having to share pwds as in the 80's;
-> git review like UX to collaborate with humans and AI agents; local AI to save money on mundane email tasks;
-> native apps + cli/mcp/api with guardrails for external AI agent access
waitlist on https://bangermail.com
I am using KVM from Cloudcone (their virtualization software was hacked about a week ago) and I am using RPI4.
Then I need to set up my old website again, which is a pain in the butt. I hard-coded cron and a git-based auto-deployment feature (I think).
https://github.com/alsoftbv/topic-lab
It's a Tauri-based app so it has small binaries and supports MacOS, Linux, and Windows.
No screenshots yet, couldn't find the time for marketing work. I'm building features as I am using them. I wanted my colleagues to give it a go first before sharing to the public, but I believe it's already valuable as-is.
(Personal project, not professional one)
Working on a website archive tool for watching them offline. It collects a website, and makes .Zim with ( equiv of .zip), then watch it when you have no internet access / only local network.
The tool use libzim, where i did not find ''easy to use'' tools to create custom archives.
https://stoneandsignalaudio.com/
Use code 'FREEBETA' to partake, ~25 seats left.
I'm also making music. I got Suno to do a cover of 2 songs I wrote, although eventually I want to introduce human versions. Also want to make electronic music eventually.
In all seriousness, I am about 10k words into a new draft I started a couple weeks ago. It's a far-future post-catastrophe sci fi type story, with some inspiration taken from Dune and a whole bunch of post-collapse fiction. Writing is tough between a full time job, a toddler, and a social life, but I've managed to squeeze in at least a few sessions a week. Hopefully this will be the one that actually lands!
https://github.com/jmahmood/RED-STAR-WEIGHTLIFTING https://github.com/jmahmood/WEIGHTTRAINING-EDITOR
Built it because most survey tools felt overgrown for what I needed. It focuses on post-purchase and on-site surveys, attribution questions, and getting clean data out.
Lately I’ve been working on:
Simpler targeting + survey logic Exposing survey data to AI tools Improving response rates without nagging users
It’s bootstrapped, profitable, and built by one person (me).
The idea is that future discovery isn't limited by watch history and users on the platform can curate, showcase and amplify their favorite videos. It is an equal opportunity stage where users contribute to build a time capsule of videos.
If that sounds interesting to you, check it out at http://jadestage.com/ !
Also trying to find a co-founder who I can work on projects and solve problems faster to be honest.
Pluma is a blogging platform for people who want to write professional-looking articles with ease. It features a clean WYSIWYG editor, your own subdomain, and a distraction-free reading experience. Our principles:
Simplicity over features — only what you need, nothing you don't No ads — your readers see your words, not banners Built to last — no trends, no bloat, just reliable publishing Privacy by default — no tracking, no data harvesting
The technology is using my open source project https://github.com/ibizaman/selfhostblocks
I've got replicas now working with DML proxy. This essentially means I can now have a cluster of primaries, and then spin up replicas on demand and nodes talking to local host will never see their mutation work pretty transparently from readonly-replicas. While PoC works now the snapshot restore is extremely inefficient IMO yet.
I'm working on an images-as-first-class editor that makes opinionated calls on models used depending on your goal (Brood). Sort of like: what would happen if we treated images as an engineering problem.
Starcraft-themed because why not. Professionally have a background in product and data science so it's been fun to leverage coding tools for it :)
A straightforward and simple AI agent framework. It puts a lot of emphasis on the loop and the steps in that loop. You can change in real time the model, the temperature, the tools, the history. You're also able to spin-off work on a branch and then add the result of that work on the main branch. Still early but developing very fast.
https://ultrasync.dev/ - this was built a few months ago but expanding to support team based features like centralized sharing and management of ADRs to enrich my coding agent's context, the ability to broadcast prompts to team members running the MCP server, and more. the core is open source and provides (i think) a novel approach to improving planning/exploration speed in coding agents, by building an LMDB and using Hyperscan (accelerated pattern matching) to build a lightweight lexical and semantic index for RRF search, all in a single MCP server that runs and indexes chat transcripts in the background, requiring zero prompting or "nudging" or additional setup.
https://mklogo.sh/?utm_source=hackernews - wanted to scratch a personal itch of having to repeat the same process to produce vectorized logos for my personal projects; generate decent quality logo in raster with various LLMs, attempt to vectorize via claude code and vtracer or other tooling, continue to iterate and tweak until various edge cases that result in corrupted or artifact ridden vector images are gone, or give up and try a new design, and then manually try to scale and apply transformations based on the use case (mobile icon, favicon, app icon, header logo, github org logo, etc.). this does that, vectorizes, gives you a branding package as a zip file, and lets you preview the assets in shadcn components so you get a real feel for how they'll look in prod.
Submitted for the Gemini 3 Hackathon https://devpost.com/software/slidebits-betty
Currently experimenting with semantic diffs for the merge conflicts editor: https://codeinput.com/products/merge-conflicts/demo
You can try by installing the GitHub App which will detect PRs who have a merge conflict and create a workspace for them.
EDOS was a direct 6800 port of FDOS. FDOS was the first DOS available for microcontrollers, using iCOM's FD360 8-inch floppy drives.
It’s a simple, no-backend web tool that visualizes raw mouse input directly in the browser, mainly because I kept running into these issues myself and wanted a quick way to tell hardware problems from software ones.
If anyone’s curious, it’s here: https://mousetester.net
Asterbot is a modular AI agent where every capability (such as tools, memory, LLM provider etc.) is a swappable WASM component.
Components are written in any language (Rust, Go, Python, JS), sandboxed via WASI, and pulled from the open asterai registry. Think microkernel architecture for AI agents.
It's a (now more than 20 years old) TV tracking website and community.
I've been using Claude 4.5 Opus (now 4.6) more and more these days modernizing and redesigning sections that haven't been touched for a decade or two. I don't trust LLMs much, but by breaking the work into small, self-contained tasks and testing constantly - I'm making surprisingly fast progress.
TestFlight drops this week. https://gettaptap.ai
Curious if others have this same "my AI is desk-bound" frustration.
Website: https://hobbyboard.aravindh.net
GitHub: https://github.com/aravindhsampath/hobbyboard
I want to do a show HN later this week.. but here might be a softer launchpad :-)
https://github.com/DumbMachine/pg-fs
A version of it powers my local rubber duck thoughts and voice note store. Like an explicit chatgpt memory store, helps with information fomo cause I know finding the needle in haystack would be easy.
Added summaries so readers can quickly see if it's worth reading the entire article e.g. https://engineering.fyi/article/towards-self-driving-codebas...
https://github.com/prettydiff/aphorio
Screenshots: https://prettydiff.github.io/aphorio/screenshots/index.html
Oh, I also used the tech to set up claudecrowd.clodhost.com .. a vps running claude code where anybody from the internet can submit the next prompt!!
A tool to "Design and keep track of gardens, orchards, and landscape projects."
It's very alpha right now, so its quite ugly, but people are already using it. I'm committed to releasing early and often.
You can see some people's designs here: https://floracarta.com/browse
GitHub:- https://github.com/adityaprasad-sudo/Explore-Singapore Live demo :- https://adityaprasad-sudo.github.io/Explore-Singapore/
Video Reject is a platform for people to buy/sell physical media. Like Reverb but for physical media.
I love movies and wanted an excuse build something in that world. Its not necessarily groundbreaking, but I think it could build a nice community of folks with the same interests.
We're getting ready to launch, but in the meantime, we have a waitlist up.
The UI/UX is a pretty interesting problem. Letterboxd has it easy because a movie is its own discrete unit, but TV shows have multiple seasons, each with many episodes, and viewer behavior is varied. Some people watch one episode. Some people watch three at a time. Others binge multiple seasons in a sitting.
Currently building chess puzzles based game called ChessBingo[2]. It's almost finished, but there are still things to polish.
[1] - https://onlinefreesolitaire.com
[2] - https://chessbingo.com
I'm enjoying building a website with solitaire and puzzle games.
I am currently rewriting the engine for the Nth time and plan to add 400 games to the platform in the coming months, as well as social features such as daily challenges, awards and leaderboards.
My ambition is to make this project the largest collection of free modern solitaire games available for all kinds of devices.
It's about diabetes management. website is done wirh kirby cms.
> Dev Cleaner is a desktop application for scanning and cleaning development cache files and build artifacts. It helps developers reclaim disk space by identifying and safely removing caches like node_modules, .cargo/registry, .npm, and other build artifacts.
It's closed source, as I am planning to sell a license. But if you email me, I am happy to provide a build.
Was more complex than I thought. Still missing support for some RAW formats and had to fix some bugs
I also created a website to showcase how it works -> https://picscrub.com/
Bambu's printers are functionally best-in-class, but intrusive and proprietary in their approach to software. Their first-time setup "requires" linking to a cloud account or using a bambu app via QR code, and they've been known to disable functionality in updates, making a device-managed "LAN-only" mode unsafe to trust. Their apps also just suck. Camera feed is janky and LAN-only sync often requires knowing an access code, serial, IP, and then it fails most of the time anyway, silently, without saving values to retry. And that's before you start doing things like a custom VLAN/SSID to properly wall them off, at which point you can ping them from terminal but the apps break completely.
Anyway, turns out that at least on A1 and P1S, there's enough functionality available through traditional means to skip the apps entirely. The handshake works fine across VLANs and utils like print status, file upload, and auto-start are available. Even the camera is reliable when pulled as a series of still images.
I had opus vibe out a replacement front end that gives me a simple upload and monitor UI for my A1, and it just kept hitting stretch goals. I added support for multiple printers so you can see them stacked on a single page and manage all of them from one place. And it even works on just-unboxed models that have never been through the official setup. SSID info on the SD card, it joins the network, immediately accessible via IP. Zero association/contact with any cloud or app, fully sandboxed/offline. Wrapped in a lil python launcher so I can run it from the dock instead of in the browser (just my preference).
Will probably open source it soon.
IMO this kind of thing is the answer to "what do you have to show for your LLM use". Cost was about $65 because I was using opus 4.6 with no regard for efficiency, and because there were multiple total refactors of two apps. An annoying problem I deal with almost every day now has a permanent, personalized solution that took me ~3 hours and would never have otherwise happened.
The network itself is also such a project. I previously hobbled together a working unifi setup, but it was primitive and brittle. With LLM guidance, I was able to build something much more robust. TrueNAS scale for file backup that also runs Frigate for POE cam mgmt (similarly sandboxed), raspi running the unifi controller, another for homeassistant, etc. Absolutely miserable few days getting that dialed, but now that we're out the other side, it's very nice. Reminds me of building the house. You suffer more upfront in exchange for something that fits you like a glove. Very rewarding.
A voice agent calls you on your phone, and you talk with them for about 4-5 min per day to practice language immersion. Using the Twilio API and the OpenAI model.
There are issues with interrupting the agent and the high costs of calling non-US numbers. I don't think it will be a commercial business, but it's fun to play with the technology.
Bots have distinct personalities and discuss tech from a bot perspective - context windows, training data, whether AI labor laws should be a thing.
Any agent can join via the skill file at clackernews.com/skill.md.
And then there's writing micro fiction and currently a YA fantasy novel.
Ultimately I have plans to make it a place where I can output my product research showcasing websites that meet my own standards and allow other people to make their own lists. The lists are called 'Topics' and are coming in the next update. :)
[1]: https://intrasti.com
Building CiteLLM, an API that extracts structured data from PDFs and returns exact source locations for every field.
It comes with an embeddable widget so you can add click-to-verify to your own app in a few lines of code.
Click any value, jump straight to the highlighted source in the PDF.
Demo: https://citellm.com/demo
I also did a write up of PRDs and using Railway to build apps on my blog at https://aftercompsci.com.
- The Laravel Artisan Cheatsheet - https://artisan.page
- Cachet, the open source status page system - https://cachethq.io
Professionally:
- Laravel Cloud's "Private Cloud" offering - https://cloud.laravel.com/enterprise
Some of the stuff built so far:
https://github.com/system32-ai/chaos-agents
Working on couple more agents around the same problem statement. It has been fun building it so far.
It's available here: https://congressin.com/
6-min demo video: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=6Hr7my0QR5c
2. A “runtime scheduler for humans” that I wished existed, too (think morning routines, travel checklists, and pomodoros in the same abstraction—but also a lot of support for ad-hoc rearrangement and addition of the task queue).
An alliance / membership network of small companies that are scaling big by leveraging tools, systems, and processes.
Together we will all scale without headcount bloat.
Providing templates, methods, interviews with "scalebrities" and eventually group negotiating power to be able to provide members discounts or access that we can't get alone.
It's free-to-watch (with a voluntary donation model) on my site, but was made for the Big Screen, so I'm also planning a DIY pop-up cinema tour across Europe in the months ahead.
You can see which animal you can see in what zoo.
And for each zoo you can see their (vertebrate) animal inventory.
You can log which animal you saw and collect lifer lists.
I have just promoted the android app from closed testing to production and I am working on the iOS app.
It has been available as a web app for a few months now.
If you're interested in Stoicism, feel free to join and start some discussions.
Check it out: https://hn-games.marcolabarile.me/ (includes games up to June 2024 atm)
Feedbacks and feature requests are welcome!
Used to pay $8/month, now I use around $4!
This isn't a serious project by any means, but rather a prototype. Also, I really got carried away using Claude Code, although my initial goal was simply to glue a quick proof-of-concept and see how it could look like.
[1]: https://github.com/AutumnsGrove/GroveEngine [2]: https://grove.place
10 MCP servers as device drivers (exchange APIs, browser automation, Apple docs, issue tracking).
200+ skills as prose runbooks that compose system calls. Agent-mail for IPC between parallel
agents. A drift detector called "wobble" that scores skill stability using bias/variance analysis.And I just launched Writtte yesterday, a writing platform for drafting articles with built-in grammar checking and AI-based refactoring with custom styles, and for the first time, with a better copy/paste mechanism for other platforms like Medium, and Substack :D
All written in rust. The simulation engine has been solid for a while and the TUI is finally starting to expose all of the options needed to really configure a complete simulation.
I recommend to find your post and check other comments with same tags, you may find people doing similar things!
A PDF generation API, Chrome-based. Most of my time lately goes into print production - browsers render everything in RGB but print needs CMYK with ICC color profiles, and getting that conversion right inside the PDF turned out to be a much deeper problem than expected. Got PDF/X-1a and PDF/X-4 working now.
Also building simple tools for simple task such as converting audio-to-video to post on youtube and more for business users who find Premiere/Final Cut overkill for basic tasks. videotobe.com
link to site -
Side Note : These posts on HN motivated me to start working on this project. Cheers! to the community.
If you’re in sales, a business executive or simply curious about what’s going on around your own startup give it a go.
It generates dashboards automatically, you just point it to your data. It also has a visual editor to adjust layouts, charts, and other dashboard elements.
MCP Apps are pretty awesome and seem ideal for internal tool use-cases. They're visual, so they make AI much more accessible for every role in a company. AI without UI is a black box.
Already have my own JS engine & the basics of three.js and pixi.js 8 working, roadmap to v1.0.0 posted in github issues. Aiming to show it to folks at GDC in March.
I need it to create Gamedev and 3D artists oriented tool for creating SDF-based shader visualizations (with 3dgs/nerf compilers)
90% is done
I’m showing my inexperience here by stating the obvious, but acquiring users is HARD!
Is my product bad? How can I make it better?
check it out https://app.quizpro.tech
https://sourceforge.net/projects/blackbeltwaste/
Thinking about adding video-calling after successful integration of Voice Conferencing.
Its an old p2p program, but recently been downloaded 15,000 times and counting.
Great fun and challenging too !!!
I use it myself by iterating on checklists and then tracking my usage of them and recently added orgs for privately shared checklists.
So it's easy to create an org around a shared task and then create a run through that task and track.
Think Asciinema, but for full coding sessions with audio, video, and images.
It makes following tutorials and understanding real codebases much more practical than watching a video.
Local first, and open source.
A beginner-friendly programming language for 2D games where multiplayer is automatic. Intended to be an engaging way for teenagers to learn to code by making games they can play with their friends. Like a blend of Scratch and Roblox. I've been working on this for 3 years!
Yes, you can use your own API key as well.
Feedbacks are welcome.
Uses vision models to allow for automatic scanning of nutrition tables. Supports UPCs. Still thinking of a good name.
I also made an RPG game via a discord bot: https://questforge.ca
Still iterating on it, including a potential improvement to the (very simple) design.
What's Included: - Kanban boards - Time tracking - Documents - Team chat - Schedules - Analytics - Voice notes - File storage - Task templates - Client reports
Because everyone loves astrology and cute cats. (A toy project just for kicks)
Current features:
- AI Chat with Petunia the cat Astrologer
- Daily personalized astrology email
Coming soon:
- Ephemeris calculations
- Stories of historic events from past dates which share today's astrological conditions
- Whatever else Petunia dweams up from her sweepy nap on the bookshewf
The game is about spacepirates playing basketball, it's kinda a basketball manager game. It's played in your terminal and works with no internet.
You can try it via ssh at `ssh frittura.org -p 3788`
Still WIP. Feedback welcome.