An PWA primarily for my wife and my daughter. They can order their hot chocolate and their coffee as if they were going to grab something at a fancy café downtown, but instead it's at home and I'm the barista. It is quite nice to have for when my wife comes back from work and want something specific, or when we are waiting for the visit of a few friend, they can order exactly the available beverages and everything is ready when they're here.
It was also a good playground for me to implement Web Push notifications (to never miss new orders).
It's a basic Nuxt 3 app with Appwrite as the backend with rough edges, but much enough for our household use !
If you want to spam my phone with notifications, please visit my café : https://mytinycafe.com/alix
Also some feedback: the ordering buttons are inexplicably in french despite everything else being in English. Choice of language or defaulting to English would be expected...
Also - multi-select and nullable options. So that I can create options like Taco / Steak / Pasta, and add side options that are relevant only when one of those is selected.
Anyone can fork it and quickly add the i18n (or just translate into a different language) for their own purposes. People will likely want to contribute i18n. People may fix or improve things for you.
Of course, it's entirely up to you - but I've appreciated half-complete software countless times before.
Don't fall into this trap, strike while the HN iron is hot, all these people +1'ing will never come back when you're eventually happy the code quality is "improved"
If it's truly that bad you'll benefit from the feedback since it's an internet exposed service, although considering you're a professional freelancer, I'm sure it's fine.
And yes, I feel like, working on it before open sourcing it is like cleaning before the cleaner. It's ok if the code is messy and there are bugs, that's why OS exist.
Very cool idea imo congrats
PLUS, to sweeten the deal. here’s a bunch of tech support!
If I could make a (not-important) suggestion, I think being able to re-arrange / categorize menu items would be useful. Something that lets you group together drinks apart from snacks as an example.
Though that only holds while we have free time. If we have a kid, then I can see a great amount of value in that app.
One nit: the contrast in dark mode at least on the marketing site is a bit off (But I'd love to fix it myself if it was open source :) )
The ordering could’ve been “solved” with a WhatsApp message, ( or shouting ? :D ) but that would have been so boring!
This much better life UX !
This app is a reminder of being playful and imaginative in life can bring joy, congrats!
Thank you for giving me some joy.
And for the food, one can already add anything, it's just a text field. A friend of mine only has alcoholic drinks and snacks on his menu page.
The URL is public e.g. for /nick (me)?
SecurityBot.dev is an all-in-one uptime, performance, security, and SEO monitoring tool. I launched it a few months ago and have been iterating on it ever since. Later this week SecurityBot.dev will log its 1 millionth uptime check which is pretty cool to see.
It includes the usual uptime monitoring service that you see everywhere else, but also features such as a PageSpeed Insights monitor (https://securitybot.dev/pagespeed-insights) and a broken link checker (https://securitybot.dev/broken-link-checker). I continue adding new monitor types as I personally need them (and also based on use feedback).
Basically personalized meal planning and grocery integration. Since the Show HN I posted a couple months back I've been incorporating user feedback to add things like meal prepping, better ingredient reuse across meals, and cooking style preferences.
One of the biggest points of feedback has been adding more grocery stores but I'm really limited by who has APIs to actually integrate with, which is basically just Kroger and Instacart. Walmart has an API but ignored my API access request. Would love to hear if anyone has ideas on how to approach this.
Right now I have a build that loads in the browser, but I really want to have "multithreading" which means workers in the web. One can use asyncify with emscripten to translate blocking C++ to WASM, but that transition is not perfect, right now I'm debugging a bug where there's a race condition that halts all execution and the main thread runs in an infinite loop waiting for the workers to stand up. I guess I'll have a few of those ahead.
The main goal is to 1. just have fun 2. use yjs as a collab backend so multiple people can edit the same PCB. This will probably work with pcbnew, KiCad's layout editor, since it has a plugin system and AFAIK I can do the sync layer there. For the rest ( schematic, component editor etc. ) I'll have to figure out something.. KiCad does not sync automatically if you modify a file, I'll have to do some lifting there.
Anyway, it's a lot of fun, I really want this thing to exist, I'm hoping that I won't run into a "wellll, this is just not going to work" kind of issue in the end.
Focused on all the interesting and exciting happenings in tech here, from AI to defence to deeptech, and posting the most interesting job openings too. Did you know Europe had two space launch startups? I didn't until I started this project!
Feedback very welcome :)
UI is very nice and simple, one tiny bit of feedback is that a 'guidelines' page would be worthwhile, especially while it's new! I thought I'd post my own project on the site - sometimes that's a little bit of a no-no though, and I couldn't find any guidelines to steer me towards what types of things to share, etc.
Edit: Tiny extra feedback, is upvoting something immediately changes the rankings in the browser. It's pretty impressive speedwise, but especially if you're a couple pages in, you can bump something off of the page you're on which makes it a little weird to do something like 'upvote article and then check the comments'.
I'm definitely going through the comments I've had later and will take everything onboard. Guidelines is a great idea - for now it's basically "HN guidelines but Euro-centric content please" but I should definitely write that down.
I believe that the main challenge would be to get more traction and build a community. Hope you find a way to encourage as many people as possible to join the website.
My very minor nitpick -- I would add some kind of background colour to the main post list, something like #FAFAFA looks fine to me.
I'll look at the background suggestion too, thanks!
It shifts out of the screen on the left cutting off the comments. (The problem is probably how you deal with the long url or not deal with it)
I get the job posts the hard way, from scouring about a dozen different sources, including my own shortlist of "interesting companies".
> Show TP: TreatyHopper - Pay less taxes
> Treaty shopping is a tax strategy where companies route profits through intermediary countries with favorable tax treaties to minimize overall tax liability.
Can't make this up x)
Copy HN UI as its. no one cares.
Good luck
Completely free, no ads, no in-app purchases and no accounts / network required offline voice transcription.
I have also built the macOS/Windows/Linux versions which I'll also make free to download and available on my site soon (https://blazingbanana.com/).
iOS version is built and works (extremely well), just waiting for the Apple Developer signup process to complete.
Big shout out to https://github.com/mybigday/whisper.rn and https://huggingface.co/ggerganov/whisper.cpp/tree/main for making this even possible.
Any suggestions are welcome.
So a couple of hours later I'd written a script that does transcription based editing: on the first pass it grabs a timestamped transcript and a plain text transcript for editing; you edit the words into any order you like and a second pass reassembles the video (it's just a couple of hundred lines of python wrapping whisper and ffmpeg). It also speeds up 4x any silences detected that sit within retained sequences in the video.
Matching up transcripts turns out to be not that hard; I normalise the text, split it, and then compare to the sequence of normalised words from the timestamped transcript. I find the longest common sequence, keep that, then recurse on the before/after sections (there's a little more detail, but not much). I also sent the transcription to ffmpeg to burn in as captions, because sometimes it makes the audio choppy and the captions make it easier to follow.
I know, tools have been doing this for years now. I just didn't have one to hand, and now I do, and I couldn't have done this without whisper.
Honestly, the capabilities of whisper is insane, the fact that it's free and open source is really a gift. Some of the things it can do feels almost sci-fi.
If you ever decide to release it publicly please let me know, sounds like a very useful tool.
So I am installing it through the link you provided, which directed me to a "install success" page saying "your purchase is successful" even if your app is free. Another obstacle to adoption :-)
Last, I was not informed on the page of the app' size. Seeing what it does and the time it takes to download I am afraid it could be huge? Third obstacle :-)
As for discoverability / the "your purchase is successful" message, I'm not sure what else I can do, I've set it to free, no ads etc in Google Play. Maybe I need to hit a few more keywords for transcription so it surfaces it more.
App info shows 218MB size, which I suppose is about what I'd expect for a model+app code :shrug:
I love the "free forever, no ads part..." But it obscures what the app is for. Maybe start with the "Speech to text transcription" to make it clearer.
Either way, that's just semantics. Great job
This way one can listen to the recording again, and correct such issues.
Do you have an idea about supporting languages other than English?
The average model and upwards should support all languages from the whisper models by default.
I haven't tested them all so I'm unsure of the quality, however it should in theory support the following:
---
Albanian
Amharic
Arabic
Armenian
Assamese
Azerbaijani
Bashkir
Basque
Belarusian
Bengali
Bosnian
Breton
Bulgarian
Cantonese
Catalan
Chinese
Croatian
Czech
Danish
Dutch
English
Estonian
Faroese
Finnish
French
Galician
Georgian
German
Greek
Gujarati
Haitian creole
Hausa
Hawaiian
Hebrew
Hindi
Hungarian
Icelandic
Indonesian
Italian
Japanese
Javanese
Kannada
Kazakh
Khmer
Korean
Lao
Latin
Latvian
Lingala
Lithuanian
Luxembourgish
Macedonian
Malagasy
Malay
Malayalam
Maltese
Maori
Marathi
Mongolian
Myanmar
Nepali
Norwegian
Nynorsk
Occitan
Pashto
Persian
Polish
Portuguese
Punjabi
Romanian
Russian
Sanskrit
Serbian
Shona
Sindhi
Sinhala
Slovak
Slovenian
Somali
Spanish
Sundanese
Swahili
Swedish
Tagalog
Tajik
Tamil
Tatar
Telugu
Thai
Tibetan
Turkish
Turkmen
Ukrainian
Urdu
Uzbek
Vietnamese
Welsh
Yiddish
Yoruba
---
Apologies for the formatting, not sure how to make it look nice in the comment.
A new bugfix update for the "Translate to English" toggle (which was functionally always set to on) should be available soon, it's just awaiting Play Store approval.
I've been focused on getting functional parity across all OS's since the Android release. This is very close to being done and I just need to reach the milestone of it being available on all platforms before I move forward.
Hopefully you will take another look when the next update is out.
We have a similar product in the construction space. Would love to talk to you about some of our challenges and possibly work together. Interested?
I have added the auto-copy to clipboard functionality that will come with the next Android release and be included in all others. Adding a hotkey / quickbar button is on the roadmap for the desktop versions.
If you want to give the Linux version a shot, you can download it from here - https://downloads.formait.app/whistle/linux/WhistleDesktop-l... - I've just stuck it in the same R2 bucket as another app, as I've not sorted the proper pipeline out yet.
I believe you have to make the source code public (please correct me if I'm wrong). I'm more than happy to do so, I've used a whole bunch of open source stuff to build the app so it only seems fair, I just need to make it a bit less messy and something I don't mind being public.
if I am talking in german the text is translating it to english. Didn't expect that
There was a bug causing the "translate to english" to be always enabled. This should work correctly and translate to your native language.
Will be in the next update (in a day or two).
- Currently in free Early Access with 18 competitive mini-games.
- Players use their mobile phones as controllers (you can use game pads as well!)
- Everything is completely web-based, no downloads or installs are necessary to play
- All games support up to 8 players at a time and are action based, with quick ~one minute rounds to keep a good pace. This means there are no language based trivia or asynchronous games!
- In the future we plan to open up the platform for 3rd party developers (and Gamejams!) as well. We take care of the network connectivity, controllers etc.. 3rd party devs can focus on developing cool multiplayer mini-games without spending an eternity with networking code and building the infrastructure.
Interested to hear if this resonates with Hacker News readers!
I made a daily word puzzle called Tiled Words.
Currently about 2,000 people play every day and I’ve released 59 puzzles!
One feature I’m excited about is crowdsourcing puzzles. Today’s puzzle is a “community puzzle” made entirely from clues that players submitted! I plan to do this every week or two.
I wrote about launching and the first month of puzzles if you want to learn more!
https://paulmakeswebsites.com/writing/a-month-of-tiled-words...
https://codorex.com/shared/zIe6BrLCVfaPt1DuWm1DeyoMIIeTPyed
Congrats on the traction!
I enjoy it, but I find the clues seem a bit too easy, and honestly I'm normally terrible at crosswords. Take that for what you will, totally understandable if you're aiming at "cozy/relaxing".
I appreciate the polish of the UI compared to a lot of the other janky word games out there anyway.
And thanks for the feedback! Balancing the puzzles is really tricky so it’s good to know when folks think it’s too easy or too hard.
It’s interesting to see the range of player skill (and how much they do or don’t enjoy challenge.) On a recent puzzle one player left feedback that it was too easy and another left feedback that it was too hard.
My aim is for puzzles to be challenging but not frustrating. The hard part is frustrating means different things to different people. From my stats I can see some players complete a puzzle in 2 minutes that takes another player 20.
For the daily puzzle I do lean towards making it a little easier but I want to explore a few ideas for making trickier puzzles in the future.
- Releasing additional “bonus” puzzles this are harder or more complex - Letting people build and share their own puzzles at whatever difficulty they choose - Adding settings to allow players to toggle things like hiding the theme at first.
That said, I’m still trying to figure out the overall balance for the daily puzzles! It’s good to know you think they’re a little on the easy side. I should try to gather more feedback and maybe tweak that!
That said, I’d love to offer packs of harder puzzles or user generated puzzles in the future!
I noticed it was added to a couple of others that I didn't submit to (goldles.com and dles.aukspot.com) I'm not sure if there are others I should be aware of.
I’m not totally sure! Marketing is not my strong suit.
I think my biggest advantages are:
- It’s sticky. A good percentage of players keep playing once they start
- Organic sharing. Lots of people have told me they shared it with friends and family. (I also built a “share” feature)
The pattern so far has been:
- I share it or someone else shares it somewhere.
- There’s a big spike of people trying it out.
- I get some new players.
- The player count stays roughly steady until it gets shared somewhere else that gains traction.
It was featured by Thinky Games. Sharing here got people interested. Someone shared it on Metafilter and that got a lot of views. Other folks have shared it on other sites that have led to smaller bumps.
But I’m still experimenting.
The UI is fantastic too.
I also made a puzzle game in a similar vein slidecross.io
I love UI animations but they can be overkill for a lot of web UIs so it was fun to have a playground where I could lean into that more. (Though I still ended up pulling back from some of my more “out there” experiments haha)
I launched this on HN over the summer, but it's millisecond-precise audio synchronization for multiple devices, performed purely in the browser! I'm sitting at around 5K daily active users now. Also, it's open-source!
It started out as something marginally more useful than vendoring your dependencies as submodules + baking in the knowledge of how to build a bunch of common projects.
I realized, though, that there was somehow a huge gap in the insane world of C build tools. There's nothing that:
- Lets you pin really precisely and builds everything from source (i.e. no binary repository)
- Does not depend on either a scripting language or a completely insane DSL (Conan uses Python, CMake is an eldritch horror, ditto Make, lots of other tools of course but none of them quite hit the mark)
- Has a good balance of "builds are data" and "builds are code".
Anyway, it's going great. There are, of course, a ton of problems to solve. Chief among them is the obvious caveat that C is not a monoculture like Rust. There will be zero upstream libraries that use this tool natively. But I don't think it matters. I think I can build something which is as much better to the existing tools as, say, UV was to existing Python tools, even with that disadvantage.
I love programming in rust. Lots of non-rust developers think the whole point of rust is safety, but honestly, the things I like most about using it are the quality of life features like cargo. I love the idea of bringing that to C!
Relevant to this thread: I've spent the last week or so hand porting SeL4 from C to Rust, mostly so I can learn how it works (and learn OS development more generally). One of the biggest pain points I've had trying to use SeL4 is understanding the insanely complex way it uses cmake to compile the kernel and userland software. With Cargo, I can just run `cargo build` on my rust kernel project and it just works[1]. I don't even have a build.rs.
Anyway, I'd love it if we had a tool that made sel4 so easy to build. I doubt it'll be that simple, but its a lovely goal.
[1] (Well, except for one small step: You need to run objcopy to convert the 64 bit elf into a 32 bit elf to run it in qemu. But other than that!)
Are you interested in the result? If so, just reply with some handle where I can reach you.
It's crazy, and I understand why it's the case, but I know how to fix it and I'd like to have a crack at it.
Happy to get any feedback :)
They compare it to timeshare systems, which seems horribly out of date (although apparently that's still kind of what occurs anyways on CPUs). What's the part that's "Real Time" relative to anything else people do with Cortex processors? The preemptive part? Not trying to be critical, just not getting the real time part. Does it not share CPU resources among tasks? Get a fixed core per task or something? Minimal interrupts and minimal thread switching?
Here is a work in progress build:
https://muffinman-io.itch.io/space-deck-x
It is a combination of a shoot-em-up and deck building. You fly and shoot until you get to the boss, when you get your deck out to fight them.
That genre combination is definitely too ambitious, but I think it is fun to play and I’m enjoying making it.
I have a bunch of ideas how to combine the two parts better. But over the years, I’ve learned to control scope creep and actually ship pet projects.
Right now I’m in a middle of changing how enemy waves are spawned. After that I want to make a short tutorial and add two more bosses as well as more enemies.
If you end up playing it, please share your feedback I’ll be glad to hear it.
The game is made using Kaplay, a game dec library which brings me joy to use. I can best describe it as my friend described Pico-8: “easy things are easy”. But compared to Pico-8, Kaplay doesn’t have virtual console limitations and comes with a big library of components. Try it out, the community is small, but the library itself is really fun and easy to use.
EDIT: For context, this is about two weeks of work, in the evenings when my kid is asleep.
I couldn't figure out the Boss fight with cards though. I run out of energy and so I assume my turn is over. But how do I end my turn?
A button guide in the main menu would be helpful.
- "z" plays a card - "x" ends your turn
If one never played deck builders, they probably have no idea what is going on. Thanks for trying it!
Edit: typo
I learned that ships have a "max load" line (or Plimsoll Line) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Load_line_(watercraft) to prevent overloading them with cargos, but my todo list didn't. So I built an app to surface my emotional load and put mental health above raw productivity.
I am experimenting with the concept of giving each item in the iOS Reminders app an impact multiplier between -1.0 and +1.0 to assign them "weights". The net weight of the todo items should indicate my overall mood or emotional burden. If it doesn't maybe I have yet thought about what's making me feel good or bringing me down. The net weight is visually represented by the "water line" that rises the more into the negative the net weight becomes. I'm thinking of adding features to nudge me into addressing the rising water line.
And since I want to lower my own stress and anxiety using this app, there is no signup or subscription. No data collection other than the bare minimum to make the "tip jar" working through the App Store IAP, so no PII collection.
Do you think you'd find this approach to be helpful for managing your own anxiety level?
(Edited to add a bit more clarification)
Turns out not that hard.
In about a weekend, I built a UETA and ESIGN compliant tool. And it was free. And it cost me less than $50. Unlimited free e-sign. https://useinkless.com/
The idea is simple, but I think it could be really cool: an autonomous agent that actually manages an entire radio station. It creates its own shows, play copyright-free tracks, shares the daily program schedule on social media and the website, and later I want to add guest appearances too and live 7/24.
Plays 3-5 songs prior to a "break", where the logic will call out channel donators vs pick a random topic to discuss, then use an LLM to generate the script before sending to gemini.
In the end; its really just a wrapper around FFMPEG broadcasting to an SRT or RTMP stream. I can upload the latest branch when I get home to share
With LLMs, generating ideas and snippets is cheap; what’s hard is keeping track of fragments with their “why I cared” context over months. Most tools (Notion/Obsidian/etc.) assume you will do the work (folder/tag/linking) structure will maintain it forever. I don’t.
In LACE we: – capture fragments from the web via a browser extension – auto-cluster them into evolving “threads” / projects with summaries & reading lists – maintain a graph of connections across threads (“topology of attention”) – let you turn a cluster of fragments into an essay draft when you’re ready to share.
Stack is a fairly standard web app + LLM pipeline. Used neo4j's llm-graph-builder as a starting point.
The interesting bit is self-organising graph. treating fragments/questions/lines of inquiry as first-class objects and letting the system reorganise around them over time instead of fixed folders.
It’s in a small test phase right now. If you’re a researcher/writer/engineer/founder who constantly loses good ideas in your notes and want to try something opinionated in this space, I’d love feedback.
background write-up: https://open.substack.com/pub/ozthinks/p/from-fragments-to-i...
The problem for me was trying to read and understand the implementation of a swiss map implementation. The SIMD instructions were challenging to understand and the documentation felt difficult to read. I thought that if I had an interactive tool where I could set the inputs to a SIMD instruction and then read the outputs, understanding the instructions would be much easier.
This turned out to be true.
Building this tool for all AVX/AVX2 instructions turned out to be a larger task than I had expected. Naively I just went off a Wikipedia page on AXV and assumed it had listed all the instructions (this was a bad assumption).
I am nearly there. Looking forward to completing this project so I can actually use it to do some fun stuff processing text and maybe even get back to that swiss map implementation.
https://github.com/fmstephe/simd_explorer
(This is also my first attempt at a TUI app)
All the games were either developed with libGDX or threejs. I have no plan to monetize yet and still work on building traffic and improving SEO. Surprisingly, I got approved for google adsense already, which I submitted just for experimenting.
I loved the 2000s vibes on the design too, so I appreciate it!
We want to speed up adoption of custom AI, but most people suck at building it (no expertise, money, time, etc.).
We thought, what if you could "Vibe ML" your way to it? Allow any AI engineer or PM to build custom AI directly from their current implementation.
So we built these agents that orchestrate the entire life-cycle of custom AI. We start by hooking into how you use AI, prepare/label your data, detect the best recipes for your task, fine-tune, and deploy it for you. Really tried to simplify the entire process.
We aren't entirely sure about the UX/UI patterns. We aren't going chat first because if most people don't know where to start with ML, how in the world are they going to prompt it!?! Instead, we auto detect the AI tasks you've built and go from there.
Reading practice and assessments for k-12 students, with reporting and tracking for parents, tutors, and teachers. It uses speech to text and quizzes to assess the students reading ability. It picks up skipped words, substituted words, along with metrics on speed and pauses.
I have been testing it with my 2 daughters and its finally at a spot where I don't have to drag them to test it against their will and they are showing improvement. I am working on the marketing now. I have gotten some interest from private tutors but I have a feeling it will be great for the homeschooling community.
Thanks for any feedback! Please leave first reactions as the marketing page is what I am iterating on right now. Don't hold back!
The goal is to help small teams and fast-growing startups understand where cloud spend is leaking and automatically reduce waste (idle resources, over-provisioned workloads, inefficient Kubernetes setups, and AI API usage). Setup is lightweight, and we focus on actionable recommendations rather than massive dashboards.
We’re still early and testing with a few teams who want better cost visibility without running a full FinOps practice.
Website: https://deepcost.ai
Working on a new newsletter to encourage people get off social media by helping them discover all sorts of random interesting sites that exist out on the open web.
But I also don’t really care about growth. I’m not trying to build anything massive. I just want to be helpful to people.
My team is also about to ship Atmos [1], a lamp for the bedside that automatically shifts from higher-blue light during the daytime to low blue light at night.
Atmos ranges from 1800K to 5700K
Maybe not the most obvious, but for both products, it’s in the tech specs under Quality of Light. We try to be very detailed with what we publish there. Thanks!
It’s not obvious because I didn’t get there - I expected it to be one of the expanding sections with “Product Details” and so on. (I.e. when you have expanding sections to start with, it’s standard that all the information is the sections, and users are trained not to scroll down).
I already have a wind down dimming schedule on my entire home. It changes brightness and color temperature gradually over 2 hours. How do these bulbs compare with philips hue?
These bulbs are not smart and do not have a full RGB array. But what you gain is way higher color quality even at low color temperature (1700K), much lower flicker, and infrared.
Atmos is a smart lamp, and we will get our Matter certification in early 2026. This one is also not RGB, but it has extremely high color quality in the whites and no blue spike. Flicker is lower and at a way higher frequency (32 kHz). We haven't updated the specs on the site yet as we are wrapping the calibration, but the CRI is 98 on the Atmos lamp.
That’s why our products focus on both intensity and color change (but we lead with blue light reduction since it’s easier to grasp).
Also, if you look at our specs, you’ll see that we don’t use pure amber or red light; we use very low-blue white light with high color rendering. We have yet to do the study on this, but you can read surprisingly well with our lighting at a very low intensity (enough to make your mom angry that you are hurting your eyes), whereas with lower CRI sources, you would have to make them brighter to achieve the same visual acuity.
There is some emerging research that IR may play a role in melatonin production locally in cells, which is why we added it to the bulb. Early days for this scientifically, but Scott Zimmerman and associated researchers suggest wideband IR may be effective, even if it’s only 20-30% of the visible intensity.
We're working on a Nest-style ML feature for the Atmos lamp that learns your intensity preferences and automatically applies them. And we have a whole bunch smart circadian products we're working on—something for the desk and workspace next.
For Bedtime Bulb v2, not out-of-the-box because it's all analog electronics, but we REALLY want people to dim it gradually throughout the evening. If you want to automate dimming, the Leviton Smart Dimmer we offer on the site will allow you to control it with any of the popular smart home platforms.
Why isn't Bedtime Bulb smart? Bedtime Bulb v1 was our MVP, and we focused on getting the quality of light right over adding any smart features. It turns out, many of our customers have told us they don't want anything smart. So when we made v2, we focused on doubling down on quality of light features: infrared, warm dimming, "Perfect Dimming" (smooth dimming with any TRIAC or ELV dimmer), really high CRI/R9/TM-30, etc.
Smart bulbs are definitely a future possibility, but right now, we have the analog line (Bedtime Bulb v2) and smart line of fully-integrated lamps (Atmos).
[0] https://restfullighting.com/pages/circadian-mode-for-philips...
I am running it in my city for a library of things. We hope to help people abstain from buying things they only need once a year.
It includes a reservation system, and an dashboard to manage those reservations in the shop. Currently I'm expanding it with a proper product management interface.
I’ve often had the problem that I’ve needed a tool and borrowing it from Obi or similar cost more than half the price of a new one so I just bought a variant from Parkside for cheaper or similar price. Keep up the good work!
I also think that for taxeable purposes this would work better than buying and selling used items, especially in countries with gross income taxes. In the rest of the cases at least it would reduce the administrative burden to prove that ones net-income or value-add was marginal or negative.
I doubt it'll be of interest to folks here - but my Family recently (in the last couple of years) started to breed ragdoll cats in the U.K.
This has been my personal project to understand where I personally find LLMs useful as coding assistants, and where I don't. One easy to spot example is, front-end + copy. Another area I've enjoyed it is talking through how I'd design and build functionality and features ahead of time.
It's been very interesting, and is helpful to folks I care about, even if no-one else ends up using it!
USCIS forms still use XFA PDFs, which don’t let you edit in most browsers. Even with Adobe, fields break, and getting the signature is hard.
So I converted the PDF form into modern, browser-friendly web forms - and kept every field 1:1 with the original. You fill the form, submit it, and get the official USCIS PDF filled.
What Fillvisa does:
- Fill USCIS forms directly in your browser - no Adobe needed
- 100% free
- No login/account required
- Autosave as you type
- Local-only storage (your data never leaves the browser)
- Clean, mobile-friendly UI
- Generates the official USCIS PDF, ready to submit
- Built-in signature pad
I just wanted a fast, modern, free way to complete the actual USCIS form itself without the PDF headaches. This is a beta version
Infrastructure architects think in terms of building blocks in "high-level designs" and those building blocks are often socialised/expressed in Visio/Spreadsheets. Thinking in building blocks is now more necessary than ever because of the sheer size of the infra being designed/deployed.
This approach is problematic after the design phase because there's a lossy translation to where the low-level design lives, often referred to as the Source of Truth, like NetBox.
NetBox Designs allows users to express composable, versioned, and templatizable building blocks that can be rendered to low level designs. No lossy translations, and you can always check in the future "does my LLD still match my HLD and if not, where?"
The first days were so hard but now I’m getting used to it. I documented it here: https://ramezanpour.net/post/2025/12/11/dopamine-detox-is-ha...
https://apps.apple.com/de/app/camera2url/id6756015636
Camera2URL is, as far as I know, the only iOS and macOS application that let‘s you send the picture taken with the camera directly to any HTTP endpoint the moment you press the trigger.
For example, this makes it possible to trigger an n8n workflow the instant you take a photo:
Lineage-aware. Versioned. Trustworthy Data - for Engineers and AI.
Your engineers waste up to 40% of their time monitoring, investigating and fixing data. Even then you don’t trust the accuracy, source, or freshness of metrics on your dashboard. You wish AI can answer your data questions but it cannot show you proof, or where it came from. AI helps software engineers to move fast and break things, because they can always rollback, with git. But you cannot do that for data. Bad data entering the system, spreads across the company before spotting, and takes weeks to clean up.
DV changes this, giving you lineage-aware, versioned data. It records data-lineage when data is captured, transformed, and committed, at commit/snapshot level. So when things break, DV knows what other data is impacted downstream, and it can rollback the whole chain to the previous state, instantly - no data copy/restore needed. It can also backfill the data across the chain automatically.
With DV, both your team and your AI agents can finally see: - where data came from - how it was transformed - how to revert safely with a single click
Your engineers can move fast on data, without breaking trust. Your analysts can build pipelines by simply describing business questions to AI.
DV is Git for data, so you can focus on your business, putting analytics on auto pilot.
-- Please contact me if you are interested in preview program.
I’ve written a PoC already (mind the crappy and incomplete UI), mostly to test the wild custom UI idea, and it’s working so far! https://i.redd.it/ocx9m5av6d6g1.jpeg
Okay fine, playlists are a good thing to have as well. Either way, I miss stuff this simple.
You can find the CC0 postcard app here: https://sweetpost.art/ but if you want to go the extra step you can install the Chrome extension and see what comes up: https://chromewebstore.google.com/detail/new-tab-new-art/old...
edit to add Firefox addon: https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/new-tab-new-a...
If you want to send a postcard you can use the promo: 1BUCK to send a postcard for a dollar to whoever in US. Any feedback or questions are welcome.
Currently spending time establishing relationships with historical societies, as I really need them to contribute points of interest, and stories. Many of these societies are run on a voluntary basis by 70+ year olds, so it's a long process. Getting some good responses eventually though, so it might actually go somewhere, just a lot slower than I want.
Also still doing https://wheretodrink.beer, but haven't added anything of note since playing on this other project.
And react2shell was a blast
This is so very silly, but the only way I have to collect emails for people interested in the progress, beta testing or final version, is on my beer page.. So I created a page for the world's most obscure / smallest city and if you want to be updated you can register there - https://wheretodrink.beer/in/croatia/hum-75gkn - The registration is under "Stay informed about updates in Hum?"
If anyone signs up I'll manually move you out of that list and into the "local history" waitlist.
I started this over the summer when I was moving to a new house and wanted to document the family history behind some thing I own. It's turned out to be more useful than I thought and I've expanded the features as friends found it useful. A developer friend, who I used to work with, joined me and we're both working on it now. It does have a little revenue now but we are far from quitting our day jobs.
I'd really like any feedback from the HN community!
It's still early prototype / beta, but wanted to share it anyway!
Anyways, it's a good idea, thanks for the push!
As a backup, The Stinger or The Sting-Ray should also do well!
I don't like JavaScript, and I've been meaning to learn Rust for a while, so I'm compiling the Rust algorithm to WebAssembly to run in the browser natively! It's been a fun trip back into the arcane world of numerical algorithms and linear algebra!
EACL (Enterprise Access ControL) is a situated ReBAC authorization library based on SpiceDB, built in Clojure and backed by Datomic. EACL queries offer sub-millisecond query times and has replaced SpiceDB at work (CloudAfrica).
'Situated' here means that your permissions live _next_ to your data in Datomic, which avoids a network hop and avoids syncing to an external AuthZ system like SpiceDB, so all queries are fully consistent.
EACL is fast for typical workloads and is benchmarked against 800k permissioned entities. Once you need more scale or consistency semantics, you can sync your relationships from Datomic to SpiceDB 1-for-1 in near real-time because there is no impedance mismatch between EACL & SpiceDB.
Read the rationale for EACL here: https://eacl.dev/#why-was-eacl-built-the-problem-with-extern...
IMO, if you need fine-grained permissions, EACL is currently best-in-class for the Clojure ecosystem. EACL is especially suited to Electric Clojure applications and can be used to populate menus in real-time.
EACL would not have been possible to build solo in my spare time without modern AI models to rapidly implement specifications and test against human-written tests.
Here is a ~7-minute screen recording of EACL used from an Electric Clojure application for real-time ReBAC queries: https://x.com/PetrusTheron/status/1996344248925294773
open source browser first server-less markdown document workspace and publisher, contending to be a free obsidian alternative
storage is done in indexeddb or it can utilize opfs to work on a local file directory
comes with git integration
can publish to aws cloudflare vercel and github pages
built with shadcn react and typescript
I love online Unicode tools, serious ones and silly ones, and I use them often for fun or for development. What I see online is that few technical people have a good understanding of Unicode, or have big misconceptions about how it works. I'd like to change that, through visualizations and direct links to the data sources (the aforementioned UCD) and links to the Unicode documentation (which is well-written but can be difficult to navigate or even find).
I've worked a lot on it, but I'm totally stuck again. I get too zoomed in and it's hard to see the big picture, plus it's difficult to know how much effort I can realistically put in because I don't know how big the market is. It's a niche tool, but how niche? Would anyone pay for it? But I'm not sure how to do market research, especially for a niche like this. Any advice would be appreciated!
1. The initial idea was based on this post I made in 2024: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=42014045
https://github.com/Fingel/gelly
Available on Flathub: https://flathub.org/en/apps/io.m51.Gelly
There’s many different solutions out there but I’m carving out a niche where we deal with complex shift assignment problems.
For example one of our customers has specific union rules that need to be followed when assigning work and we ensure that they are compliant.
Our backend relies on an MIP solver as well as heuristic search to refine plans.
Working on CiteLLM, an API that extracts structured data from PDFs and returns citations for each field (page + coordinates + source snippet + confidence).
Instead of blindly trusting the LLM, you can verify every value by linking it back to its exact location in the original PDF.
Now this one became my favorite extension.
https://github.com/jeanlucaslima/ato
Warning: current version is maintained only through claude code, even the README. Feel free to criticize/send suggestions.
A place to find and be found for twitter users only right now. As a silly project I am trying to make not a social network, but an extension of another social network. So far its going OK. It also functions as a link-tree like site with profiles: https://meetinghouse.cc/x/simonsarris
Eventually I might open it up more widely, or make a different globe per social media network.
I've always loved electronics since I was a kid (still trying to learn). As I explore and learn I've begun to make these small "breadboard helpers" [1]. (Just one on Resistor Transistor Logic (RTL) right now.)
An obsession over a project in a 1970's hobbyist electronics magazine sent me down the rabbit hole that is (was) analog computing. So I have been bread-boarding and prototyping small analog computer modules.
I'm in the PCB-layout stage for the modules and hope to have them ready early next year.
Shameless plug: https://jeremymaslanko.com/
Each of us is reading sixty books over 2026, five a month, where every book is self selected by each member.
It’s small, six people, all brought in by application only.
You can check out our shared bookshelf here! (Heavy inspiration from Stripe Press)
https://bookshelf-bookclub.vercel.app/book/cmj4pfpom001gqsbj...
(swipe left/right on mobile, up/down arrows on pc :))
Currently trying to better contextualize the visible subregion of the matrix in relation to the full dataset (beyond what the current minimap does).
[0] https://scikit-learn.org/stable/auto_examples/applications/p...
Here's the elevator pitch for the framework:
Its built around 3 key ideas I've dealt with inside the agent ecosystem 1. Agents become far more capable when they have access to a CLI and can create or reuse scripts, instead of relying solely on MCP.
2. Multi-agent setups are often overvalued as “expert personas” but they’re incredibly effective for managing context, A2A is the future.
3. Agents are useful for more than just writing code. They should be easy for non-engineers to create and capable of providing value in many domains beyond software development.
If that sounds interesting take a look! https://github.com/brycewcole/capsule-agents
I'm literally trying to fix broken junctions around me.
It's at the same time laughably easy, and wildly complicated.
I'm calling the alternative, correct junction a 'traffic bean':
https://josh.works/traffic-bean
It's relevant to software, sorta. I've got rather a lot of GIS/mobility-related data available here. It's just a rails app that renders a bunch of my strava activity data all at once: https://josh.works/mobility-data
The fixes are entirely accomplishable with nothing more high-tech than traffic cones. They can be upgraded to more permanent and pretty physical objects, but the key bit of the traffic bean finds traffic cones fully sufficient. No half-million USD traffic signals, no red/green/yellow light cycles. continuous flow. safety. peace.
Some stuff that's obvious in some domains, like "at high-throughput times, don't allow key bits of infrastructure be completely unusable".
Bringing this to american municipalities is like trying to speak a language with someone that doesn't speak your language, but demands that you treat them as if they do.
it's been a big, long-running project. Most tradition in the USA is really a fig leaf for supremacy, and people can smell that I'm coming for their supremacy a mile away, and they immediately begin deploying emotional defenses.
Or so it seems.
Screenshots in the App Stores, e.g. https://apps.apple.com/us/app/pistepal/id6754510927
Still a little bit rough around the edges but hopefully will be / is in decent enough shape for the start of the ski season (just about happening now..)
Currently figuring out the right balance of free tier & daily trial. Priced at $10/month and therefore significantly undercutting the competition, hopefully this is enough to gain entry into the market. (May need a more generous daily trial though, admittedly 10 minutes is not really enough to actually try it out on the mountain).
Seems ad spend is necessary to get any kind of traction...
Feedback welcome!
Don’t over engineer it - just an indicator about how much further down the slope or back up the slope the rest of the pack is.
I find it annoyingly frequent that I’m either waiting for mates who have bombed off ahead because I didnt see them pass, or I’m waiting at the bottom for mates who are up the slope waiting for me because they think I’m behind ! Literally hours wasted each trip doing this.
You might think a quick phone call is the solution to this but that’s too clunky. It’d be nice to take out my phone and just quickly see something on the home screen indicating this, or on the watch app.
Maybe having different kinds of (infrequent) beeping in specific cases: - when I'm last - when I'm first
This could get old quite quickly thought, just a thought.
This will help people set clear expectations for their apartment search.
The prices match ImmoScout, but are insanely high above the Mietspiegel, and therefore not actually a legal rent.
Nice site, has tons of info on moving to Berlin. Must have time quite a bit of effort to put together
In the real world finally moved everything to USB-C. Gave all my old cables away. I have two chargers in my home and a handful of C to C cables. Everything connects to everything now.
Home is now downgraded to a dumb home. Lights work on physical toggles. No hubs or sensors anywhere. Heat and AC is with a dumb panel on the wall.
It feels freeing.
I got rid of almost all the customized software in my life, and the few projects I decided to keep, I aggressively modernized, getting rid of thousands of lines of original code and adding many times more tests than I'd ever had before.
It very significantly improved my life and career to not have a second part time job maintaining a note taking app.
Some of the substitutions wound up being a step down in features, or required rethinking parts of workflows, but the time savings is such a benefit.
Custom notetaking tool with p2p sync-> Google keep
Custom batteries included Linux distro for SD protection, Kiosk browsers, offline docs, creative commons content packs -> a few scripts built into my control server on vanilla RasPi OS
Rsync-> Borg -> Kopia(to avoid fussing with Borg's community NAS package)
And actually, still browse the web and watch YouTube, but just on my non-work days.
Do you still host things? If so, do you host from home and how?
None of them were open to the public, I SSH-tunnel into them. All stuff just for myself.
I backed everything up locally and shut them down. They should be auto-removed at the next billing cycle.
I feel like I am constantly fighting LLM interfaces to make available and organized the context needed for discussion. There just seems to be way to much copy pasta into and out of the infinite scroll interface. I also find the output tough to quickly edit and discuss with the chatbot.
It is simple enough but I couldn't find anything like it and it has quickly become one of my favorite tools. I am build over buy to a a fault, so if there is something out there like this already I would not be surprised.
Why screenshots and not copy the source?
Trying to build a small-scale ISP/hosting provider domiciled in Canada. We really want to be able to rent real rack space to enthusiasts who would like to benefit from having stuff in the datacenter but don't want to take on the opportunity cost to get started. It came out of my own desire to have a machine in a DC rack.
This week we've been writing a bunch of "reviews" of self-hostable software since a lot of our friends are curious about this space but don't have a good understanding of how to get started. https://blog.colocataires.dev.
Are there any legal or other reasons I, a resident of Canada, should host my services in Canada rather than in Europe or US?
I spent a year attempting to adopt Temporal at scale, and 6 months trying to wrangle some multistep data enrichment and ML pipelines. This is what I wish I'd had with what I learned
A 2-4 player casual card game that's similar to Exploding Kittens. It'll be free-to-play on mobile and I've been focusing more on marketing these days (mostly running ads, creating short form content, and reaching out to influencers).
I'm using Unity for the front-end, and Node.js (just because I'm already familiar with it in terms of dev + liveops) for the gameservers.
Egoless Engineering, a book about how to be an enabling staff engineer in the Nordic's largest mediahouse. I saved up vacation and took the whole of December off, mostly to relax. But I'm also working on more chapters for my book.
It’s much shorter than my first book, Effective Haskell, and leans more advanced, especially toward the end. Although the format is puzzle focused I’m trying to avoid simple gotcha questions and instead use each puzzle as a launchpad for discussing how to reason about programs, design tradeoffs, and nuances around maintainability.
Very early days still. Whilst I created a fork of toon for Kicad (called TOKN (https://www.mikeayles.com/#tokn)), with the intention of using a reduced token format to generate schematics using LLM's, I could get the models to follow the syntax correctly, but they didn't have the knowledge. So I was then going to create a whole RAG system, but got distracted by this current project.
There are people out there doing AI schematic generation, like flux.ai (which is incredible (and incredibly well funded)), but 90% of products, especially at proof of concept stage, are basically a microcontroller, some power, probably usb, and some IO, bluetooth/wifi if you're lucky. So we can use a library of pre-validated subcircuits and slots them together on a grid. Routing's deterministic, so if it compiles, it works. (sorry, deeppcb & Quilter!)
The enclosure side is more fun: once the PCB's done you've got real dimensions to work with (board size, mounting holes, where the connectors poke out), so I use an image model to generate some concept art, then feed that to an openscad generating model as visual inspiration alongside the hard constraints.
Basically trying to get a full hardware product pipeline done automatically.
It started as something I wanted to build for myself. I have a Bosch dishwasher that lacks any glanceable indication of how far along it is. Bosch provides an app, but checking the progress takes too long to be useful.
I figured live activities was a good fit, and then realized that I am not alone in wanting something like this. So, I am trying to make it into something usable for all the home automation tinkerers.
Amazon used to have a thing for books that didn't have Kindle editions, "Click here to tell the publisher you'd like to read this on Kindle." You should develop in public (X/Bluesky/Mastodon), and have a prominent form for wonks like us to forward "I want Aivi" to various manufacturers.
https://aibodh.com/posts/bevy-rust-game-development-chapter-...
https://aibodh.com/posts/bevy-rust-game-development-chapter-...
https://aibodh.com/posts/bevy-rust-game-development-chapter-...
This was a "scratching my own itch" project that I cooked up because I was tired of Claude et al cluttering up all of my stuff with random markdown files. Just a simple Obsidian plugin to serve an API that the CLI tool can use to interact with the Obsidian vault. I use a Claude Skill to get the model to create all of those random markdown files in my Obsidian vault, and read from them when it needs context for something. It's working really well for me so far!
Have you given any thought about how to create the puzzles? Do you think it'd possible to create them using LLMs?
It’s build using ESP32 and a small screen which shows On and Off and the time till meeting is over. I learnt Fusion 360 and designed a small snap fit case and got it 3d printed.
I have a small electron app running in my mac os system tray which connect to esp using BLE and it also checks if Mac Camera is in use (using Apple logs) and then communicate it with the device.
Calling it Door Frame. Had quite fun making it as i learnt 3d design, c++ code using Platform IO and other fun stuff. Even designed a small binary protocol to exchange data over BLE
For example, is the blocklist UX side Domain based? Company based (Allow all by Google/Alphabet), category based (Search engines)?
And on the backend, is it DNS based or HTTP based? Or maybe an OS hook.
Weblock uses a whitelist, not a blacklist, and it is domain based. Once you allow a domain, it can be browsed by a child. You can allow it forever/15 minutes/1 hour.
How it works: WKWebView, before loading a page, asks the backend if the domain is allowed. If not, it shows "Not allowed" screen and a "Request access" button - child can tap it and you (parent) will get a notification.
So traffic is not going through the backend or a filtering VPN, the app just asks the backend if a page (domain) is allowed to visit.
Visits are logged, so you, as a parent, can see what your child has been browsing. How much time did he spend on a homework website.
Some WKWebView callbacks used for that: * onShouldStartLoadWithRequest - to intercept a request and check if it's allowed * onLoadProgress - to show loading progress bar * onNavigationStateChange - to track browsing history
Also I had to implement a workaround for buggy Screen Time in iOS 26 - even if you add Weblock to "always allowed" apps, iOS will still treat each website as a separate "app" and block it, asking to you "allow' each website on system level. It happens inside WebKit codebase, but luckily this bug has another bug in it - if you re-open a website, it suddenly works and all other websites in this session work tooSo I need to listen to `onScreenTimeBlockingStateChange` event and automatically reload a website if that happens.
Also I added an ad blocker to Weblock. It uses uBlock Origin filters, converts them to WKWebView content rule JSON format and feeds to WKWebView. The app checks the backend if rules are updated and updates a local copy.
What's next: need to get "Default Browser" entitlement from Apple. Then you can block Safari on kid's phone using Screen Time and have Weblock open all HTTP(S) URLs.
App is written in React Native, no performance issues. Backend is Ruby on Rails.
All notes are simple markdown file stored locally.
I’ve been using it to benefit my research and make the knowledge to stick better on my head for several years. My base is more than 400 markdown notes now, and I sync them to a private GitHub repository.
The vibes are off at the moment, but goal is to do a show HN and a little PR a little closer to the holidays: https://mtg.derekrodriguez.dev/
Since hacker news last saw it, it’s been translated into English, German, Spanish and Chinese. If, say, a Chinese speaker wanted to learn more English words, then they could go to https://threeemojis.com/zh-CN/play/hex/en-US/today and play the game with English words with Chinese definitions and interface. This is the first cross language daily word game of its kind (as far as I know), so it’s been a lot of fun watching who plays which languages from where.
The next challenge that I’m thinking about is growing the game. The write ups and mentions on blogs add up, the social sharing helps, but I’d really like to break into the short form video realm.
If you read interviews from other word game creators, every successful game has some variation of got popular riding the wordle wave, or one random guy made a random TikTok one time that went super viral, and otherwise every other growth method they have tried since then hasn’t worked that well and they are coasting along.
So, sans another wordle wave, I am working on growing a TikTok following and then working on converting that following into players, a bit of a two step there, but that’s how the game is played these days. https://www.tiktok.com/@three_emojis_hq for the curious. Still experimenting and finding video styles and formats that travel well there. Pingo AI and other language apps have shown how strong TikTok can be for growth, so I think there’s something there. That’s all for this month!
But unlike my day job, this is my project and I get to do what I want. This is my code therapy.
It's unfortunate but native UI (as in, using the native controls with their native look) has mostly died off in my opinion, at least for complex cross-platform applications.
You can try to do it in a cross-platform manner but it never works well. Want to implement a tab bar like VSCode's? Win32 tab bars do not support close buttons (need to be custom rendered) and Cocoa tabs it doesn't even make sense for them to have a close button. In Cocoa you're supposed to use either the windowing system to do tabs (similar to Safari tabs) or custom render everything (like iWork).
So I say screw it, make it look as you wish.
The design of the API is somewhat DOM inspired (everything is built up of divs that can be styled). It's pure retained mode for now, I still need to think how I'll make reactivity work.
On macOS it uses a custom NSView to implement "divs". Drawing is done with CoreAnimation layers. Text editing is handled by a nested a NSTextView control with a transparent background. Could also host a web view in a similar manner. Context menus are native.
On Windows it uses a custom C++ class that stores Windows.UI.Composition surfaces for drawing (could also use DirectComposition + Direct2D). Text editing is handled by a windowless RichEdit control (ITextHost/ITextServices). Context menus are native Win32.
On Linux it uses a custom QWidget with a nested QTextEdit control for text editing. I'm thinking of experimenting with Qt Quick for hardware accelerated rendering like the other two.
https://cipher.social -- Distributed / p2p, encrypted social networking so I can send baby pictures to my mom.
Helping friends (and friends of friends of friends of friends) find their next startup gig without the application process. Aspiring to be Wealthfront for your career… a passive optimization that pings you every now and then with an interesting interview you could take.
Thinking a lot about how to recognize great matches. I think basically everyone can be talented force multipliers in the right situation / company / mission / team. Everyone here wants to do their life’s work, but it’s hard to find it.
Tactically working to scale reliable human-in-the-loop AI recruiter agents with very few humans.
Remixify automates the search while leaving the selection to you. You paste a Spotify playlist URL, and it helps you or provides you a good starting point for digging. It groups the results by the original track so you can quickly preview and save the versions you want to a new playlist.
We don't try to recommend new music or use AI to guess your taste. It just finds the usable versions of the music you already selected.
This is cool, I really like a lot of tunes and try to mix them in only to find it hard and just hack to whack it in. I'll give this a go!
I am working on the android version of this app. It is a tiny tool for options trader to see all the premium on one screen. Here is the reddit thread where I initially launched it: https://www.reddit.com/r/Optionswheel/comments/1nlelbp/i_mad...
If you trade stock or options, would love to get your feedback! Thank you.
Just curious, if this is a completely greenfield project, why IMAP instead of JMAP?
This is coming from someone who works with IMAP on a daily basis and has rightfully grown a disdain for it.
- asks you to hand over all information about certain customers.
- accuses you of aiding the illegal activities happening through your service (copyright violations, CP, etc).
Do you have IMAP import? And CardDAV/CalDAV? Edit: also wildcards?
A matching decompilation of snowboard kids 2 for the n64. Why this game? Well it's awesome but also I wanted to work on a decomp project from scratch. I've written several blog posts about my experience for those interested. I hope to do more in the future, probably with less of an AI focus.
* Using Coding Agents to Decompile Nintendo 64 Games https://blog.chrislewis.au/using-coding-agents-to-decompile-...
* The Unexpected Effectiveness of One-Shot Decompilation with Claude https://blog.chrislewis.au/the-unexpected-effectiveness-of-o...
It's feed aggregator backed by a web crawler that tries to find interesting RSS feeds. Posts are sorted by inverse frequency with the hope that time between posts will serve as a good proxy for quality.
I've been having fun with it! The results are a little strange, sometimes, but I've found some interesting sites that I never would have found otherwise.
Freight forwarders spend days or sometimes even weeks understanding and answering tenders without even knowing if they'll win the bid!
With Tenderlane, they can now upload the entire tender spec and get an overview of what the customer wants in minutes instead.
One key learning for this project is that I'm using Excel as the "frontend" as this is what our users are most familiar with, so lots of processes involved filling, uploading and downloading an Excel file.
Building this with Elixir/Phoenix LiveView.
https://github.com/btrettel/blastersim
The core simulator part works, but I don't yet have a user interface or documentation. Probably just going to be text input files to start, maybe a GUI later. Recently, I'm mostly working on testing.
The simulator is object-oriented and basically allows one to build up a blaster from separate control volumes and connections between control volumes. This is useful as it allows the same core simulator framework to handle different blaster configurations and even variants of them. For example, someone asked me to make the spring piston able to pull a vacuum on its back side due to not having sufficient flow. That's easy here as I just need to add another control volume and the appropriate connection onto the basic springer configuration.
Like llamafile, it's built on Cosmopolitan Libc. Getting the full Python stack + WebRTC to run as a single APE binary was incredibly tricky to pull off, but the result is super convenient. I mainly built it to solve the pain of moving large files (logs, DB dumps) in and out of containers—now it's just one command.
The repo has a demo showing a round-trip transfer between Windows (x64) and Android (arm64) using the same binary. I hope you give it a try!
It aggregates data from across the web into a single feed, pulling in news, weather, newsletters, social posts, Reddit, YouTube, and more.
I also finally launched my first iOS app that goes a step further. During onboarding, you set your preferences once. From there, AI automatically prepares your daily digest for you. Each morning, you get a notification when it’s ready, with everything relevant for the day ahead: meetings, weather, health data, commute insights, and the news you actually care about.
Our goal is to design challenges that combine prompting + coding, allowing us to score both how well a candidate prompts and how good the resulting code is. The aim is to bring measurement to AI prompting skills - how well-aligned prompts are and how candidates handle LLM-generated code.
At the same time, we want to keep a strong human balance in the process: hiring is a two-way street, and screening shouldn’t be fully offloaded to AI. We’re human-first.
Several tasks are already live - you can try them here: https://valuate.dev
I was thinking about what to get my long-distance girlfriend for her birthday which coincidentally was also the anniversary of our first date. So I thought of building her a personal website, installable via tauri so she can view it offline whenever she wants, that has a timeline of all the things we went through: first date, events, trips, moves etc.
Now I want to polish this, make it customizable, add more features like a "Reasons I love you" jar which gives you random notes your partner wrote, and offer it to others as well.
Another thing, it should be a digital living collection of memories and notes for each other and should evolve with the relationship.
Just started with this and building with Elixir and Phoenix.
PS: I realize I might need to update the website. First I wanted it to be more generic and for multiple occasions like anniversaries, birthdays etc but slimming the target down to couples for now to not overwhelm myself. It's the first ever service I'm building.
I've tried to make it look and feel at home in iOS and I like to think of it as a Notes app for the gym—it does very few things and does them well.
It's completely free with no ads because I'm not a fan of how other workout apps charge you for a basic workout experience.
I've just finished up the Import from Strong feature and would love any feedback on it!
https://apps.apple.com/au/app/hypertrophy-gym-workout-log/id...
I just finished building my own IoT platform and I’m honestly so proud of it.
It’s completely free. Please try it out it would mean the world to me! Would love some feedback.
N.B. Finished the landing page and docs this morning. Done I’d better than perfect so expect some rough edges.
It is opensource, all the computations are done on the client side,
https://github.com/jfromaniello/joseflys
An example of navigation https://joseflys.com/s/UGaIwnEY
Try out an agentic way to ship your code. Free to try. Nexlayer will build, containerize, and deploy your app to the cloud in minutes with a simple prompt.
It's mainly a distraction from enterprise programming, but it does have some parts that might be interesting to Lua programmers, like automated test suits, functional programming point free style and deploying to a raspberrypi via justfile.
The git README kinda doubles as a blog post: https://gitlab.com/michaelzinn/replicide
It uses a pipeline involving several AI models, including Nano Banana and OpenAI’s gpt-image-1 for the raw image generation.
A Python ORM, inspired by Drizzle and the like. Whenever I come to Python I'm frustrated by the ORM options. They generally lack type-safety on inputs and outputs, or useful type hints.
SQLAlchemy is an institution but I think it's hard to use if it's not your full-time job. I check the docs for every query. I want something simple for the 80-99% of cases, that lets you drop easily into raw SQL for the remaining %.
I'm going to keep hacking at it, would love to from anyone who thinks this is worthwhile (or not). Also: - The interface for update queries is clunky. Should I add codegen? - Should I try to implement a SQL diffing engine (for migrations). Or just vendor sqldef/similar...?
One amusing thing I've noticed is that every time the AI generates code with a hard coded hexadecimal constant, it's a hallucination. My son suggested feeding all of the chip datasheets into the AI and see if the constants improve.
2. Finally converting my home semi-hobby electronics business (something like a guitar effects pedal) to machine assembled circuit boards.
Primary goal with the project was to create a Bluesky client that I wanted to to use. While the standard Bluesky app is fine, I wanted something more reminiscent of Tweetie, Tweetbot, Twitteriffic, etc. Something that feels at home on the iPhone. With the transition to Liquid Glass, felt like a good time to practice and get to experience the new UI with a new project.
Still in what I call "alpha", but pretty feature rich. Support push notifications, lots of discovery/feed following features, search tools, moderation setting management, post translation, and much more.
If you use Bluesky and are an iOS user, there's still space on my TestFlight and would appreciate any feedback or comments!
Updated manually so expect some delay :)
If you have a list of posts you pull data from, it would be nice to have a simple clickable list of them all on a separate page. Also, (month year) could go next to neat 'View on HN' on each item.
Do you parse all 'What Are You Working On?' posts (see https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46266893)?
Built it for my 10yo. Solo dev, .NET + Claude Haiku. Free to try, no signup.
And as everyone now, I'm experimenting with LLMs to bring some new AI-related features to the service.
On another project, we've now beta testing (in ordination) Asus GX10 processing power running on-device LLMs for _local_ processing of patient medical data for 'differential diagnoses, implant plans and risk profiles in real time while the patient is in still in the chair'.
I'm building out a new concept around training AI computer use agents on real sensitive tasks without PII exposure. My first demo releasing soon is a dataset of AI agent with human assisted tasks on things like paying my personal credit card or doing bank transfers.
Main things: 1. I don't modify the website I operate on 2. I take full videos and record all AI agent logs and all human actions 3. I don't modify any of those logs and will release them to the public.
I am working towards a future where AI companies are paid to generate the data they need for AI agent operations instead of paying massive sums to generate synthetic data. Imagine a future where labeling companies are completely sidestepped by simply training on production tasks directly.
Redactsure.com
To be clear, there's no benefit to using rust over C for SeL4. SeL4 is formally verified - which provides a level of assurance far beyond what the rust compiler can check at compile time. I'm really just doing it for fun and learning. I've been wanting to really understand sel4 for awhile, and there's something wonderful about learning it from the ground level.
So far, I've got a stub booting. The CPU successfully boots into 64 bit mode and starts running my rust code. I'm starting with x86_64 because thats whats on my desk. At the moment I'm porting the code which locates the root process via multiboot, so I can set everything up in memory correctly.
If anyone is curious, here's the repo: https://github.com/josephg/sel4-rs
Its pretty bare bones for now, but everything starts simple!
https://terminal.pink/bgce/index.html
Or https://github.com/blmayer/bgce
The idea is to have the minimum needed for a usable graphical experience. So drawing to drm buffer and handling inputs basically. It's been fun to do.
I am build a toolkit for it too:
https://terminal.pink/bgtk/index.html
Or https://github.com/blmayer/bgtk
I think it is nice that we can just write to a buffer and it appears on the screen. Very little abstraction is needed. Hope you like it.
I also made some progress on my hardware projects, but I'll keep a low profile for now.
At a high level, Google does not have a product culture, so there is a lot of white space for companies like ours to make adopting Google Cloud APIs much easier for less technical users.
It's also wild how much Agentic AI is creeping into all of our conversations - this space is constantly evolving as we're building.
You enter prompts, compare two anonymous responses, pick the better one. After voting, it reveals which models you preferred. Built it because model benchmarks don't match real-world preference, and blind pairwise comparison cuts through the hype.
I'm working on Tech Talks Weekly which is a free weekly email with all the recently published Software Engineering podcasts and conference talks in the past 7 days.
Every week I pull all the new talk recordings from hundreds of conferences (Devoxx, KubeCon, PyCon, QCon, LeadDev, JSNation, and many more) and even more podcasts podcasts. I feature the ones I think are must-watch with short summaries written by me, then include a list of everything else uploaded that week.
It started as a personal project to fix my own messy YT subscriptions and RSS feeds and now 7,500+ people read it.
I also publish extra editions from time to time like “The Most Watched Talks of 2024” which made it to the HN front page.
If you watch software engineering conference talks or listen to podcasts, you might find it useful.
I’d love to know what you think!
It feels like being able to design my own document format on the fly and display it however I want. It's making it painfully obvious how many editable primitives the web is missing, however.
Soon, we will have benchmarking capability. You would be able to compare your networth growth with inflation, compare your investment returns with benchmark etc. We would support both nav and value based benchmark. The topic is interesting in itself, and somehow, not emphasized/available in most tools.
Asset price fetching and benchmarking works best for Indian markets. We would like to build better support for international assets and benchmarks, but haven't figured how to get the data.
NOTE: you can try demo without signup, but it doesn't work in Firefox Incognito mode.
My next step is documenting how all of the subsystems work (such as virtual memory, allocators, drivers, etc.), then lay the project to rest. I don't have any grand ambitions for the kernel. The project was just a labor of love, and a way to learn some interesting things! Hopefully some of the documentation can serve as learning material for other people interested in osdev.
Then I decided to hack my own ZigBee power meter (to keep track of my meter’s LED pulses) and fought with CMake for eight hours straight, because embedded.
It was a nice weekend.
I’m learning Japanese myself (recently took JLPT N4), and I noticed that full furigana makes me rely on readings instead of actually reading kanji. Yomu lets you hide furigana for kanji up to your level and keep it for harder ones.
It’s offline-first, supports importing text from anywhere, camera OCR, and a fast dictionary.
I’m now exploring a global version (web + app) for families worldwide — especially those separated by distance.
The current product is in Chinese, but the idea is universal. I’d love feedback, and I’m open to marketing or distribution collaborations.
Product (Chinese): https://www.yunmu13.cn/products/
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.upbrew.tho...
Video intelligence platform for coaching programs and training companies. The problem: these businesses sit on 200-500+ hours of video content that becomes a "content graveyard" - students can't find what they need, coaches burn out answering the same questions, churn stays high.
We do deep transcript + metadata extraction, then layer RAG search and an AI assistant that can answer questions with timestamped citations back to the exact video moment. Think "ChatGPT for your video library" but with accurate sources instead of hallucinations. Tech: Phoenix/Elixir backend, Next.js portals, two-tier RAG architecture.
Currently serving a few coaching programs in high-touch sales mode. Would love feedback from anyone who's built RAG systems over media content - curious how others handle the signal extraction problem (transcripts are noisy, you need to identify what's actually being taught vs filler).
I am currently on the job hunt and made a job application tracker. It's a CSR React app that uses LiveStore (https://livestore.dev/), a reactive state library built on top of WASM, SQLite, and OPFS. The app enables you to track applications, leave notes and updates, and gain insights into your data, while storing your data completely within the browser.
If you have played military sim (Milsim) games like Project Reality, Squad or Arma you might appreciate it.
Its quite cool how the game devs have made a lot of tooling to use; they use Typescript to hook into in-game events and functions.
There is a whole community making lots of content too:- https://bfportal.gg/
Currently I am working on an insurgency game mode; where one team has to defend some caches and use guerilla tactics, whilst the other team has a smaller size but the advantage of firepower and vehicles.
Hopefully have it released by Christmas time.
Has the official multiplayer gameplay held up? I did try a release around the time of RDR2 on Xbox and it had seemed like pay to play may have messed with it at some point.
Curious if the mod support seems like a jailbreak from the official multiplayer.
I crunched Strava data (the Strava MCP project is incredible, and I ended up contributing to it!) and built myself this fitness hall of fame page (and also rejuvenated the remainder of the portfolio). Almost all of the stuff here is vibe coded, very happy how much I could achieve.
Something about strava and the data we get from it is really special to me. It's a fun step into a deeply physical thing (moving our selves around the surface of the earth) and renders it in this digital space - a website, an animation.
Om Friday after Thanksgiving I spent half a day building a telegram bot that accepts an address and a list of Amazon links, and in turn orders the item (at a discount since it uses my Amazon credit card), and adds it to the above "family debts" spreadsheet.
I really like the idea of programmable, trusted lending like this, and feel like it could be extended to other groups that you implicitly trust.
Seriously, I'm very proud of myself for the little I've accomplished so far. I don't have friends in tech so I don't get to talk about it or bounce ideas off people.
Thanks for letting me get that out!
GitHub: https://github.com/VladSez/easy-invoice-pdf
Features:
- No sign-up, works entirely in-browser
- Live PDF preview + instant download
- VAT EU support + custom tax format coming very soon
- Shareable invoice links
- Multi-language (10+) & multi-currency
- Stripe and default templates
- Mobile-friendly
Would love feedback, contributions, or ideas for other templates/features.
I was using another paid tool my accountant suggested. Then I decided to build my own tool, but free and open-source. It gets the job done at least for me plus I have some ideas how can I improve it further. For example I built a simple automation where an invoice is generated every month, emailed to me for review, and then I forward it to the client.
A browser automation Chrome extension and MCP. It consumes less context than playwright MCP and is more capable: it uses the playwright API directly, the Chrome extension is a CDP protocol proxy via WebSockets.
I use it for automating workflows in development but also filing taxes and other boring tasks
It allows users to "chat" with their Logseq graph. Think of it like a "Cursor for Logseq". I hope people find it useful. I have on numerous occasion wished that I could have easily asked about a specific block on my graph, and would provide an intelligent response, also somewhat influenced by the contents of the entire graph. It's still a work in progress.
It's fully open source.
If it sounds interesting, you can sign up for a waitlist here, it even includes some screenshots: https://plates.framer.website/ (excuse the website being on a framer domain, i promise the app is far more professional)
Most of my time has been spent practically rewriting the engine from just single-screen play areas (like Zelda 1) to be free-scrolling (like Zelda 3). I've also put lots of work into supporting all platforms (was just Windows; now it's also Mac/Linux/Web). And I've delved into tons of interesting programming projects while working on this: a deterministic record + replay testing system; a garbage collector for our custom scripting language; JIT compilers for x64 + WASM; a VS Code language server; the list goes on...
Anyhow, this month I'm trying to polish it up as much as I can so we can officially release the next major version.
Minemizer is a data formatter that produces csv-like output, but supports nested and sparse data, is human readable and super simple.
It produces even less tokens than csv for flat data, due to most tokenizers better tokenizing full words that contain a space before the word, and leads to less fragmentation.
There are many cool things I discovered while running tons of testing and benchmarking, but it's getting late here.
Code, benchmarks, tokenization examples and everything else can be found in the repo, but it is still very WIP: https://github.com/ashirviskas/minemizer
Or here: https://ashirviskas.github.io
EDIT: Ignore latency timings and token counts in "LLM Accuracy Summary" in benchmarks as different size datasets were used to generate accuacy numbers while I was running tons of experiments. For accurate compression numbers see compression benchmarks results. Or each benchmark one by one.
I will eventually fix all the benchmark numbers to be representative.
I am also writing an "indie book" on getting to $100k revenue (and I write it inside LakyAI, no less!).
Started off as an open source alternative to Wispr Flow for myself as I wanted to have more control over the formatting rules as well as model choice but after sharing with friends and presenting it at my local Claude Code meetup, I was encouraged to share it more widely.
The desktop app uses tauri so it is cross-platform compatible and I have tested it working on macOS and windows.
With lot's of built-in data privacy safeguards https://donethat.ai/data
Also made an overview of similar tools out there https://donethat.ai/compare
Recently broke on Linux with a Wayland security update, working on a fix! Using Electron for cross-platform.
1. Shifu (https://github.com/emvi/shifu) - a code-based CMS with admin UI. It's really easy to set up, written in Go, free and open-source, and I already sold a few websites using it. It can be used as kind of a framework to build more specialized features into a website and takes away the maintenance hell from managing a WordPress installation or a similiar CMS with tons of plugins that break with every update.
2. Zenko (working title, repo is private for now) - a very simple and no-bullshit project management software. It will be free and open-source, but I might offer a hosted option for a few bucks (like $20/year for all users of a team). I mainly build this for ourself to replace Linear, because we don't really make use of it. Don't get me wrong, Linear is awesome, but we basically only need an advanced Todo list. Main goals:
* Pull updates on the dashboard by yourself, instead of receiving notifications all the time via email
* Keep it simple stupid - no unnecessary features, no AI, just the bare minimum
* Cheap (for the hosted version, free if self-hosted) and easy to host (again written in Go)
* No feature-creep
3. Last but not least, I'm working on a "game engine" written in Go and SDL2. I do this for fun, but it is coming along nicely and teached me a few new concepts already (like ECS in Go).
Reinforced learning platform
For example, you make an API client library, now you can add polystore and accept multiple cache stores without writing all the compat layer yourself. This is a problem I've had multiple times in the past.
Or you make a project with cache, having it in files for local dev (highly debuggable) and then with Redis in prod is a simple ENV var change:
let store;
if (process.env.REDIS_URL) {
store = kv(RedisClient(process.env.REDIS_URL).connect());
} else {
store = kv(`file://${process.cwd()}/cache/`);
}
I've made many other libraries and projects during the years and having a single library handle all of this would be great.A small startup generally needs to explore and edit the production data. They would either build an admin dashboard, which is expensive, or use a database tool, which is bad for security. Not to mention a tool like pgadmin and dbeaver is clunky because they focus on database administration.
Backdoor is a self-hostable database querying and editing tool for teams. It reduces the need of an expensive admin dashboard. You can configure access control and validation policy for each user. The activities are tracked. It saves money and time, and it's more secure.
You can have your non-technical CEO, customer support, and sales to edit the production data in a safe and secure manner.
It currently supports Postgres and ClickHouse.
I'm looking for early users to iterate with. If this resonates with you, please reach out to me through the github repo: https://github.com/tanin47/backdoor
The first is a customizable digital math workbook. Currently the demo covers fourth grade math. There is a practice mode where you can select the skills you to want practice. There is also a customizable dashboard where you can setup your own widgets to practice math skills in different ways. I am working on some pre-made dashboards to help users get started. The next plan is to cover fifth grade math skills. My plan is to cover first grade math up to Calculus and High School Physics. I envision it as a companion tool for Khan Academy/Math Class/Math Books. Check out the demo. No signup required. Progress is only stored locally.
The second thing I am working on is an application to practice Cangjie. It's a Chinese input method that has been around for a long time. It is based on a visual decomposition of characters. Each character is represented by one to five codes and the majority are unique. My application teaches Cangjie like keyboarding (QWERTY) is taught to young students. You learn the location of the keys, then some basic words, then start typing sentences. I also have a free demo for it as well.
https://demo.cangjieworkbook.com
Feedback on either project would be appreciated.
It's an HTTP request replay and comparison tool in Go. You can replay real traffic, compare multiple environments, detect broken endpoints, generate HTML/JSON reports, and analyze latency
It’s currently at v0.4, so I’d love any feedback, suggestions, or ideas for improvements. (Be gentle, I haven’t used Go professionally, however it’s my main language for personal projects )
https://github.com/kx0101/replayer
Here's the landing page too: https://www.replayer.online/
Use Case: Assumption: You have access to your friends visitor parking login in Amsterdam.
You are going to a restaurant/or visiting a place near their parking zone(geo fenced polygon). You want to pinpoint a point in map and drive to that point. Being 100% sure that you can park at that point. Automatically pick a meter near there spot and park almost instantaneously. Then this app is for you :D
Marketing line: Atom is your conversational AI agent that automates complex workflows through natural language chat. Now with Computer Use Agent capabilities, Atom can see and interact with your desktop applications, automate repetitive tasks, and create visual workflows that bridge web services with local desktop software.
work in progress
This is the PR: https://github.com/ironcalc/IronCalc/pull/616
Feel free to comment and destroy it!
You can test it in: https://testing.ironcalc.com
please don't hug to death, I only got 10 GB of Data
it's 1st MVP and I got a dayjob, so please be kind. Haven't put out a howto yet, but ideally you have a notebook and a pen, some memories and grief to work through.
Working on a house renovation project in SketchUp, I wanted the same workflow I use with Claude Code: describe what I need in natural language, let AI write and execute the code, iterate quickly.
So I built a bridge. Python MCP driver talks to a Ruby extension inside SketchUp via JSON-RPC. Claude Code can now write Ruby scripts, execute them directly in SketchUp, take screenshots to verify results, and introspect the model - all without leaving the conversation.
Still very early (macOS only, requires SketchUp 2026), but it's already useful for repetitive tasks and parametric designs. "Create a spiral staircase with 15 steps at 18cm rise" is more fun than drawing it manually.
https://github.com/darwin/supex https://github.com/darwin/supex/tree/example-simple-table
Focusing on building out web app and then moving to the CLI and Terraform provider.
Two main aspects will be to do Exploratory Data Analysis and to forecast expenses.
For later stage, I am planning to create a conversational interface for the application that I will use to do basic CRUD operations as well as capability to "talk" to my data and to do simulations using hypothetical yet real scenarios in future.
Open to suggestions :)
It's essentially a book progress tracker. There are many apps that allow you to add the books which you are reading currently, but not at what pace. It's simple, no complicated stuff, no AI shenanigans.
Created as I was overwhelmed by the number of books I want to read and thought it would be helpful to plan ahead.
You add a book name, number of pages and how many pages you want to read in a day. It calculates and gives you the number of days and on which date you will finish. It's also flexible to increase the number of pages so that it can recalculate.
It's a PWA for now. Still working on notifications and stuff.
Last term I did a course on nuclear weapons and disarmament (and learned to write my first ever academic report!)[0], and this term I'm just about to give a final presentation for an introductory life sciences course (actually just posted a runthrough recording [1]). Next term I'm hoping to get into a course about cosmology!
[0] https://liza.io/categories/2fk064/
[1] https://liza.io/the-body-electric-manipulating-large-scale-a...
Then I wrote a Python program that connects whatever controller my brothers want to use (as long as it's supported by SDL2.0) and forwards that data from their computer, through Parsec, through a USB-UART adapter, to the Pico, then to the Switch. I then have a low latency capture card (Magewell Pro Dual HDMI I got off of ebay for $100) forwarding the video and audio from the Switch to my PC which I share to my brothers via Parsec. The audio was a bit tricky to get right, and ended up having to use a Virtual audio cable and Voicemeeter potato (a software audio mixer) so that both myself and my brothers could hear the audio.
It works surprisingly well and the latency is pretty low. I even got rumble working! (but not motion controls. If anyone wants to attempt it, I will accept PRs). I haven't done any formal benchmarking for performance, but my brothers and I were able to play Smash Ultimate without too much bother about latency.
You could also use the accessory Python library I made to automate switch controller presses (look in the examples directory). Might be useful for TAS speedruns?
The project is here for anyone interested. It's a bit rough and needs some cleanup and maybe a video tutorial on remote setup. But here is the WIP:
An annoying little laptop charging reminder utility that does the job.
---
There are times when I'm deeply immersed in focused work, a meeting, or engaging video content and end up missing the usual low-battery notifications on my MacBook.
When the laptop suddenly shuts down, it's followed by the familiar and frustrating walk to find a charger or power outlet. It can be annoying and occasionally embarrassing, especially when rejoining a session a few minutes later with, "Sorry, my battery died."
Over the past few weekends, I built Plug-That-In, an app that introduces "floating/moving notifications". These alerts follow the cursor, providing a stronger, harder-to-miss nudge regardless of what’s happening on screen.
The app also includes a few critical features:
- Reminder Mode: When the battery reaches critical levels, the app emits a configurable alert similar to a car's seatbelt warning, continuing until the battery is addressed.
- Do Not Disturb Settings: Customize alerts and sounds based on context, such as when system audio is playing, a video is active, or the camera is in use.
It grew out of a personal need, and I'm glad to see it used by over 50 people in the past month.
EDIT: funnily enough seems like its using a lot of battery?
Not going to deny that it was a bummer to read your second line, lost all the Endorphins earned from reading the first one. Nevertheless, I want to fix this if it's a legit issue.
Do you mind sharing more details on the battery consumption from the app?
I'm using IOKit power source notifications and hearing this feedback for the first time. (personally using this on my work [old M2] and personal [new M4] MacBooks for the last ~2 months).
Most recently I've been having fun extending the functionality on a website I use to host tools that help me structure and plan workouts - https://ironvolume.com/
I'm working on a charitable donation tracker for taxpayers. My wife and I used Intuit's ItsDeductible for years until it shut down in October. With a little encouragement, I built Charity Record.
The stack is Django 5.2 (I know, I know, I'm looking at 6 now), Postgres, and HTMX + Alpine.js for interactivity. I'm using Polar for subscriptions. It's running on the $12/mo DigitalOcean droplet.
Trickiest parts so far: TXF export (we can trace TXF back to the 1990s...) and PDF generation. At one point when working on PDFs, WeasyPrint was deadlocking a single-worker setup because it fetched the logo via HTTP. (Base64-embedding the logo got me past that, ha.)
Happy to answer questions about the app or running Django lean - I've got a few longer running Django projects.
It was my weekend 1-day hackathon yesterday building Electron-based web browser connected with PlayWright MCP and local Codex as LLM backend.
Yes, you need to be ChatGPT Pro+ to use, because Codex has no usage fee unlike API Key.
GPT-5.1-Codex-Max can handle really complex web task without templating DOM. Codex-Mini is fast so you can pick models. It does my job applying task to any of recruiting sites with no interactions. (with persistent data store, which is currently disabled on published version)
it’s https://orshot.com
it’s being used by agencies and teams to automate pdf invoice/reports, instagram/tiktok/pinterest posts etc.
basically design a template, autofill the layers with your data from anywhere and generate visual content for marketing at scale
The MicroPC is great because it makes it super easy to code and hack on something in places where it would be too awkward or annoying to whip out my laptop, and the Cardputer is just a fun little toy because it's so open ended and hackable. I've been writing an app for Cardputer to control my thermostat remotely, and I've had a lot of fun grossly overengineering the needless amount of concurrency I have added through FreeRTOS.
Something oddly satisfying about using a micro PC to program an "even more micro" PC. What a cool time to be alive; I would have killed for this kind of stuff as a teenager!
'Vibe coded' this in about a week recently. The app is also available in English and has a demo account available.
I wrote about the building process on my Linkedin (https://www.linkedin.com/feed/update/urn:li:activity:7404469...)
I noticed there are no lawyer stories there yet. Those are the best schadenfreude, and there are plenty of them by now.
You've got to be kidding.
How about 687?
Now I feel lost, I don’t know where to go from here. I don’t even know if I am doing the right thing. What do you think? Is there any guidance or roast you can give? Here is the website https://www.racetoagi.org/
Here is the trends collection https://www.racetoagi.org/trends
Here is the deals graph https://www.racetoagi.org/deals
Finally, here is the newsletter https://www.racetoagi.org/research/newsletter
One terrifying piece of news I saw today https://www.racetoagi.org/news/2025-12-15-japanese-local-med...
1) TrickTrapper.
Backwards compatible verified phone calls. Android version is in testing with friends.
2) Katalib.
We have about 1600 books or so at home, there's no chance I'm going to scan ISBN codes of all of these. I've tried four times and got way too bored after the first 100-200. The solution? Take a photo of the bookshelf, send to Claude for text parsing and series information. Then some UI etc around that.
It's working, I just need to start testing it myself and a few friends have also asked for access.
If visions of wealth don't motivate you, think of how much the insurance companies will hate it.
its a web app where you make boxes, add images or text of what's in the box. then get a qr code that you can tape to the box and scan to see the text or images in the web app.
hoping to make it a lot easier to look for things in the storage unit. instead of removing all the totes and looking in them. Just scan and see if the description fits what I'm looking for
I am not sure if I will go live with it.
It allows those professionals experts across the USA provide help to Do It yourself consumers for a fee. Consumers can be anywhere.
So I married sort of like Uber (rent skills) + upwork (rent + fees) + FaceTime + e-commerce. realtime audio transcription that identifies parts you need and builds a list for pros and you to review which you then go shop.
: Meet Handy — AI + Live Experts for Every Fix.
: Instant, intelligent home-improvement help — see it, solve it, and shop for it, all in one live session.
Live Video Calls with Pros Instantly connect with verified experts via real-time video. No scheduling hassle — just point your camera and get help.
AI-Powered Visual Assistance HandyLens AI analyzes what the camera sees, highlights problem areas, and guides both consumer and pro with contextual prompts.
Domain Expertise Specialized AI Packs (Plumbing, Electrical, HVAC, Painting, etc.) ensure every session applies the right technical and safety knowledge.
Actionable Fix Path Each call ends with a clear, AI-generated “Fix Report”: what to do, parts needed, and next steps.
Commerce & Trust Built-In Integrates with retailer catalogs for instant part links, and captures verified pro ratings and summaries for quality assurance.
Pros log in when available (between jobs, evenings, weekends). • Ideal for: • Independent contractors • Apprentices with experience but limited licensing • Semi-retired pros • Pros during slow seasons
This unlocks underutilized labor.
⸻
4. Lead Conversion (Optional Upside) • If an issue requires in-person work, pros can: • Convert the session into a local job lead • Or refer the job and earn a referral fee
An agentic media player, intended as home media server for.. uhh.. seasonal vacation videos with subtitles. I've experimented a lot with different "levels" of AI automation, starting from simple workflows, to more advanced ones, and now soon to fully agentic.
Pretty good practice project! All written in Go with minimal dependencies and an embedded vanillja-js frontend built into the binary (it's so small it's negligable)
Yesterday I built most of a Postgres extension, using the excellent pgrx[1] project, that build on ulid to add prefixes. With it you get something like this
plid=# SELECT gen_plid('u');
gen_plid
---------------------------
u_06DHRQH6SJT7N2WEQK4910R
(1 row)
The aim is for it to be the same size as a UUID in storage, but I haven't quite gotten there yet.I haven't pushed it to GitHub yet, but it's fairly done at this point.
It compares different approaches and makes some assumptions explicit. Mostly a rough tool to sanity-check effort and tradeoffs.
I got tired of the lack of ergonomics around HN comments, and built my own navigator/viewer.
Currently in the works are a digital sand timer which can be used to track pomodoros (or any sequence of time intervals), and a Jovian orrery which displays the positions of Jupiter’s moons on a strip of addressable LEDs.
I'm impressed by how far I can get "vibe making". Most of my professional experience is in high-level software, but AI gets me unstuck quickly when I don't know something specific to ESP-IDF or the hardware. As of today I've got a circuit tested, firmware nearly complete, and a custom PCB en route from JLCPCB.
One limitation I’ve noticed: ChatGPT struggles with the details of part selection (e.g. choosing specific temp/humidity sensors or connectors). Adding datasheets to the context helps a lot, which makes me wonder why this isn’t something the model can do or at least ask for.
Site where you can read and generate graded Chinese stories, in order to learn Chinese. What's a graded story? It's one written with the vocab of a {X} year old. Words are often repeated, so that you can learn from the left-and-right context. I normally pay for book versions of these, so I thought, why not make one that's online and free?
The main window uses Apple’s local LLM to summarize your conversation in realtime, with some swoopty UI like QUEUED state on Claude Code.
I’ve just added macOS Sequoia support and a really cool CLI with Claude Code skill allowing seamless integration of information from your conversational history into aI’s responses to questions about your development history.
The CLI interface contract was designed to mutual agreement between Claude code and codex with the goal of satisfying their preferences for RAG.
This new query feature and pre-Tahoe support should be out this week, but you can download the app now on the App Store or as a DMG.
I’m very excited about this App and I would love to get any feedback from people here on HN!
My Show HN: from this past week has a short demo video and a bit more info:
For my small software shop I'd like a team version of this:
- collect all prompts/chats from all devs for our repos - store them somewhere in the cloud - summarize them into a feed / digest
Would you see this as something that is sort of turn-key, where a central database is hosted and secured to your group?
Or would you require something more DIY like a local network storage device?
And similarly would you be open to having the summaries generated by a frontier model? Or would you again need it to be something that you hosted locally?
Thank you for the feedback and interest.
But maybe it starts local with an app like yours anyway. I do a lot of solo hacking I don’t want to share with the team too. Then there is some sort of way to push up subsets of data.
What I've found using this contextify-query cli in talking to my project(s) CLI AI history is substantial detail and context that represents the journey of a feature (or lack thereof).
In high velocity agentic coding, git practices seem to almost be cast aside by many. The reason I say that is Claude Code's esc-esc has a file reversion behavior that doesn't presume "responsible" use of git at all!
What I find interesting is that neither Anthropic nor OpenAI have seized on this, it is somewhat meta to the mainline interpreting requests correctly. That said, insights into what you've done and why can save a ton of unnecessary implementation cycles (and wasted tokens ta-boot).
Any thoughts on the above?
If you're open to giving the app a try, and enable updates on the DMG, the query service + CC skill should drop here in a few days. It's pretty dope.
Another alternative for update notifications is to watch the public repo where I'm publishing DMG releases: https://github.com/PeterPym/contextify/releases
Anyhow, this is really cool feedback and I appreciate the exchange you provided here. Thank you. If you have any further thoughts you want to share I'll keep an eye on this thread or can be reached at rob@contextify.sh
We are working on DB Pro, a modern desktop data workbench for developers and data engineers.
The focus is on going beyond a query editor and building a complete environment for working with data. Visual exploration, inline editing, dashboards, and Jupyter notebook style workbooks for queries, notes, and experiments all in one place.
We launched v1 a few weeks ago and the reaction has been genuinely jaw dropping. Downloads, feedback, feature requests, and some great long form discussions around real world data workflows.
We are documenting the entire journey through a public devlog series. The latest video covers the v1 launch.
Honestly, building a desktop app is so refreshing after spending a decade or so building web apps.
What if CI didn't have to involve any configuration, could run in 30sec instead of 30min, and would be reproducible locally?
https://stockflow-drab.vercel.app/
Here is the github URL : https://github.com/codingbbq/stockflow
Appreciate any feedback on the application or review on the code..
Thank you
The idea came from cooking bolognese. I needed something to remind me when to stir. So I wrote a small Go tool that just beeps at whatever interval(s) you set.
Then I kept adding stuff. Verbose mode with a live countdown, pause/resume with signals, and a JSON output mode that works with Waybar. That last one is actually my favorite part. I get a little timer in my status bar that changes color when it's counting, paused, or beeping. Click to pause. Works great for pomodoro or just keeping track of things while working.
I switched from Mac to Arch and wanted to try the whole AUR thing. Used GoReleaser to automate the build and publish. Took some fiddling but it works now.
https://github.com/Gioni06/bleep
AUR: yay -S bleep-bin
It's a travel tool for business travelers that figures out your suggested departure times for your entire itinerary based on predicted traffic patterns. Think Flighty but for all the non-flight parts of your trip.
You first build a travel itinerary with your legs - flights, activities, hotels (and hotel returns) and it tells you things like "leave your hotel at 7:40am" before your 8:30 meeting - in a single itinerary, no need to do the google maps acrobatics for every two items in your itinerary. While it's aimed at frequent business travellers I personally use it for all family leisure travel and daily itineraries around town as well - "do I have time for lunch at home after my son's class or should we bring packed lunch". I built it as during my time working in developer relations I traveled a lot, and always built unnecessary buffers and kept nervously glancing at my watch or phone to see if my planned time to leave still holds.
Tech-wise, currently it's Remix web app with a NodeJS/Fastify backend and Supabase for storage, and relying on google maps for route duration calculations. I want to expand it to native mobile clients in the future as well.
I am using it as playground on product thinking, ruthless prioritisation based on user benefit, figuring out unit pricing and economics, sensible architectural design, and exploring how including AI-enhanced features here and there can help make the product better, not just include them for their own sake.
The first business I started never gained traction, so I sold it in 2021 (which was a completely different time compared to now).
Notion had announced that they'd launch a beta version of their API, so while waiting for the early access, I built a landing page, login/signup, and all other plumbing for the web app.
It was a rather underwhelming launch (both for the API and my business), but I gained my first customer within a month.
Honestly, it's been a slog running this business (Notion's API is surprisingly hard to work with, so it seemed that I was stuck for months on end), so knowing what I know now, I'd probably have started a different business. My burnout didn't help either.
Claude has been incredibly helpful these last few months in solving esoteric undocumented edge cases that were plaguing the codebase for years.
I have a healthy MRR/growth rate right now and the biggest product in the niche, so I'm grateful for that.
React Native mobile app + React web app that shows all the coffee shops across New York City. The idea is that you can open it and the app instantly displays the closest coffee shop to you. It integrates with Google Maps reviews AI summaries for a lowdown on the coffee shop and vibe.
The airport in question has just one runway and is situated in a dense population area. Both sides of the runway are used (officially noted as two runways) for takeoff and landing causing noise complaints in the neighborhood. The airfield says it assigns a runway based on wind direction and speed, and when there is much traffic they relieve one of the two directions to prevent going over a threshold. My goals is to check if they follow their own rules and just to have a insight if my annoyance over why there are so many aircraft over my house and not on the other side is justified or not.
As a frontender this is quite challenging. I'm using Express with typescript to write the backend. Usually I get bored quite quickly because progress is not going fast enough, so I'm using a lot of AI to speed things up.
I'm checking for aircraft in a 5km circle every 30 seconds. If a aircraft is below and above x feet than I'm going to track it every 5 seconds. Between each entry I'm checking the coordinates and altitude to determine which runway (direction) is used and if it's taking off or landing. I'm also using another API to get weather data like wind speed and wind direction. Finally this is saved in a JSON file (for now) and loaded into the frontend to be displayed in a table.
I do have a working prototype, and removing a few bugs. At the moment it's checking the logs after a day of collecting to check for errors, fixing those errors and validating the fix the next day. When it's done I'm planning to open source it so that anyone can use it if needed.
What makes it different from alternatives is that it’s content-first. Instead of dragging boxes around or fighting templates that don’t fit your menu, Design Studio designs around your text. For restaurant owners, that means significantly lower waiting times and costs.
Design Studio is still in private beta, but excited about where it’s going
https://correctify.com.cy/blog/posts/meet-design-studio-the-...
Also dicking around with DMARC tools. Was unhappy with all the existing tools, want something simple I can run semi-locally for a bunch of low volume email domains. Haven't decided yet how that will turn out, still in the reading specs & tinkering stage.
That’s a rabbit hole on my list to go down - recently set up DMARC for some domains I am hosting emails for and the XML reports that now end up in my inbox were… refreshing to see in 2025 :)
My first customer has me looking for e6+ or cloud architects to be paid advisors to review cloud migration RFCs. (No coding) Comp is $1k per RFC you review. There are at least 18 RFCs per month to be reviewed.
Here’s my site I scaffolded for this: https://www.lowtouchadvisor.com/
I haven't had this much time off in over a decade and it's amazing. I've been hoping to get inspire for some outdoors or running related mechanical design/prototyping projects, but nothing yet.
I’ve been working on Pixie, a platform to employ and track your kids for real work; for families with a business, it helps reduce tax burden and fund a child’s Roth.
I’m actually an anesthesiologist with some 1099 income, built the platform myself because my kids help with my side projects, and have since onboarded CPAs who now offer it to their clients. It's been a fun journey!
The site isn't even online, but for now I'm starting to think about the next steps (seo-related things to implement, generalize app functions to handle not only blog but other (hypothetical) apps as well, improve code quality and repo readability, separate apps from the website so anyone can add them to their django website if they want to). It's a lot of work for something no one will ever use, but I must at least try to make it clean and discoverable :)
I’ve started building a domain-agnostic scientific data archive, inspired by the Protein Data Bank. It handles the deposition, validation, curation, storage, and searching of scientific data, with plugin interfaces for domain-specific components.
The goal is to accelerate AI-for-science efforts by making it easy for scientific organisations to spin-up professional-grade data infrastructure in a matter of days. “PDB-in-a-box”.
I have been making a micro-arcade of one button games using a fun little library I found.
It is so fun to just have an idea and implement it in under an hour or two. It is a great creative outlet.
Give them a play if you have a second, they are very rough around the edges but are playable on mobile or browser.
Still WIP but we are getting our first audit in the coming days!
Stoffel-Lang:https://github.com/Stoffel-Labs/Stoffel-Lang StoffelVM: https://github.com/Stoffel-Labs/StoffelVM MPC protocols: github.com/Stoffel-Labs/mpc-protocols Website: stoffelmpc.com
- db2qthelp — a DocBook book to QtHelp project converter (https://github.com/dkrajzew/db2qthelp)
- grebakker: a private backup tool (https://github.com/dkrajzew/grebakker)
- gresiblos: a tiny static site builder (https://github.com/dkrajzew/gresiblos)
Currently, I work on a Desktop GLSL shader editor. Looks fine so far...
Using Go on the back, React for ui, sqlite, containers for async work, openai. Trying to keep it simple.
Edit: we’re Malmö-based, lmk if you want to chat.
This was a satisfying project mostly because I dog-food it every night with my little one.
Trying to grow this newsletter - a roundup of the most votted and commented AI links from HN. After 11 issues I am at 221 subs, most of them from Reddit posts (I post a short description of the top 5 links on several AI subreddits). Not sure how long this will work, I feel like I spam these subreddits.
I want to launch on Product Hunt soon and maybe add it to some newsletter directories, but I have low expectations.
I post here on HN a link to each issue after I send it, maybe that will get from traction one day.
When I moved to Thailand last year, the language barrier hit me immediately. So I’m scratching my own itch and building https://thaicopilot.com/, It's designed to help you learn Thai in real situations. Still early, but moving fast.
Self serve AWS cost savings for Terraform users. Connect AWS (read only role via a Terraform module), GitHub and Terraform state. Infralyst finds underused resources and opens a PR to downsize, gated by best practice checks so it doesn’t suggest sketchy changes.
Free: 3 downsizing PRs per workspace. Pro: $99/mo unlimited PRs. Looking for early users and blunt feedback from teams running AWS + Terraform.
If you try it and mention you came from HN, I’m happy to set you up with an early adopter discount.
Tenex, a TUI for managing swarms of AI agents.
I noticed that as I'm using agents more and more my PRs are getting more ambitious (read: bigger diffs), and when I was reviewing them with agents I noticed that the first review wouldn't catch anything but the second would. This decreased my confidence in their capabilities, so I decided to make a tool to let me run 10 review agents at once, then aggregate their findings into a single agent to asses and address.
I was using Codex at the time, so Tenex is kind of a play on "10 Codex agents" and the "10x engineer" meme.
I've since added a lot of features and just today got to use it for the first time in a production system. Some rough edges for sure, but as I'm using it any time anything feels "off" or unintuitive I'm taking notes to improve it.
Fun fact, on my machine, while launching 50x Claude Code instances very nearly crashes it, I was able to launch 100x Codex instances no problem. I tried 500x but I ran into rate limits before they could all spawn :(
It’s been incredibly rewarding to see people’s changing opinions of their local government
Chrome: https://chromewebstore.google.com/detail/video-notes/phgnkid...
Firefox: https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/video-notes-f...
I'll try to add Marko to the feature comparison page soon: https://mint-lang.com/feature-matrix
Enterprise/Organization focused MCP gateway with support for sophisticated credentials management, integrates with OIDC/SAML, team and profiles support, external secret stores (AWS/GCP/Azure/Hashicrop Vault), using envelope encryption, and in-band-MCP authorization trigger for e.g. trying to use a tool which Gatana not yet has credentials for.
Ideal for Agent-2-Agent/dev teams/Github Copilot Agent (the one you assign issues)
Stack is k8s, NodeJS, React, Google KMS, hosted on GKE, with GKE Sandbox for local server isolation.
The problem: most people have 100+ accounts with weak/reused passwords. Changing them manually is tedious, so nobody does it.
The solution: import a CSV from your existing password manager (1Password, LastPass, Bitwarden), select which accounts to update, and the app uses browser automation with Gemini 2.5 Flash to navigate to each site's password change page and update them in parallel. Exports a CSV with the new passwords to import back.
Key technical choices: - browser-use library for AI-driven browser automation (handles dynamic sites better than Selenium) - Local-only architecture: passwords never leave your machine, no cloud sync, everything stays in memory and is cleared after use - Electron + Python: React frontend with a Python agent for browser automation via stdio IPC - OpenRouter for LLM access (Gemini for navigation, Grok for validation)
Security was the most important and the hardest constraint. Passwords can't be logged, can't be sent to the LLM context, and can't persist on disk. Custom fork of browser-use to inject credentials via secure parameters invisible to the AI agent.
Currently at v0.38 with code signing and notarization for macOS. Working on improving success rates - the main challenges are 2FA requirements and anti-bot detection (Cloudflare, reCAPTCHA).
Would love feedback from anyone in the security/password management space.
Now I feel lost, I don’t know where to go from here. I don’t even know if I am doing the right thing. What do you think? Is there any guidance or roast you can give? Here is the website https://www.racetoagi.org/
Here is the trends collection https://www.racetoagi.org/trends
Here is the deals graph https://www.racetoagi.org/deals
Finally, here is the newsletter https://www.racetoagi.org/research/newsletter
I built Codeboards, a developer portfolio that updates itself automatically from your GitHub, StackOverflow, LinkedIn, and more. Most dev portfolios are outdated, manual, and painful to maintain. GitHub alone doesn’t show who you are. LinkedIn is noise. Personal websites die after 6 months.
I use it as a context fetcher i.e grab an abstract/transcript/thread as clean text/JSON, pipe it into summaries or scripts.
Also runs as an MCP server (experimental), so tools like Claude Desktop or CLI assistants can call the connectors directly.
arivu fetch hn:38500000
arivu fetch PMID:12345678
arivu fetch https://arxiv.org/abs/2301.07041
https://github.com/srv1n/arivu1. probe.bike - tell stories with your bike rides. It allows you to aggregate your cycling trip into one datapoint. Will likely break this out to skiing over the break and rebrand slightly. Adding yearly cards as we speak!
2. flopper.io - I'm seeing traffic rise and rise for this and it's been a great way to translate my every-increasing understanding of AI Infrastructure architecture to a new project. It acts as a benchmark website for GPUs and systems (e.g. Nvidia NVL72.
3. llmstxt.studio - still feel like llms.txt as an idea make sense - so hedged that and but let's see. Got my first customer this month. B2B and need more features/marketing.
4. rides.bike - the oldest - a catalogue or well researched cycling destinations and information about destinations. Will be adding more very soon!
It's difficult. It takes time away from my evenings and weekends at the moment and the only way that I can really justify that is by making it paid.
Otherwise I won't get up at 0600 to fix an SLA.
Let's see! I've priced it on the cost of an inner-tube a year. So fingers crossed.
https://videohubapp.com/ & https://github.com/whyboris/Video-Hub-App (MIT open source)
In other words, something safer & more concise than maintaining multiple HashMap's, but a lot less involved & simpler than an in-memory SQLite.
It's better explained by the example here: https://github.com/utdemir/composable-indexes/blob/3baa36762....
Mastering interviews and the most common questions, practicing all the questions to ace them, of course with AI and a lot of language chaining. Real time feedback, complete analysis of interview too. https://intermock.com
And I realized I couldn't give a concrete answer. Lots of speculation, but I realized I didn't have hardly any real data. Inspired by Adam Grant's work on "rethinking", I'm _currently_ writing a tiny CLI to run self-experiments on my own productivity, auto-checking in / observing commits/code changes.
Goal at the end is to be able to test myself across different dimensions with "no AI", "moderate AI" (e.g. searching, inline assist), and "full AI" (agents, etc). https://github.com/wellwright-labs/pulse
A tool for searching, filtering and chatting with the "What are you working on?" posts. Also has a visual map (UMAP) that clusters similar things together. Useful if you want to find specific things or better understand themes.
And sort of in that same vein, I've been developing my own static site generator that I eventually want to move my blog to. It's almost certainly going to be a worse SSG than every alternative, but it'll be mine and that's worth something in itself.
Plus it's just been fun to make! I wrote some gnarly code to generate infinitely nestable layouts that I'm kind of proud of. It's the kind of code that's really cool but you can only code on a project for yourself, because if someone else had to debug it, they might say some pretty unkind things about you.
It sits on top of existing tools like PagerDuty, Jira, Prometheus, Elasticsearch, and Slack, and normalizes them into a shared schema. It doesn’t store operational data, it just brokers requests through pluggable adapters and returns unified structures.
The motivation came from incident response workflows that still require hopping across multiple vendor UIs and APIs with different auth models and query languages. Instead of another “single pane of glass,” this is meant to be a small, transparent glue layer.
On top of the core service, I’m also exposing everything via an MCP server so LLM agents can query incidents, metrics, and logs as typed tools without needing vendor-specific knowledge.
Currently open source, written mostly in Go and TypeScript. Still early, but usable with PagerDuty, Jira, Prometheus, Elasticsearch, Slack, and mock providers. Feedback from SREs and infra folks has been very helpful so far.
→ github.com/Ashwinsuriya/llm-archive-downloader
YouTube Shorts Generator Converts long YouTube videos into Shorts automatically. Whisper handles transcription, LLaVA analyzes frames to find interesting moments, Mistral picks clips and writes captions. Everything runs locally in a parallel pipeline. No APIs, no subscriptions. → https://github.com/Ashwinsuriya/yt-shorts-generator Nothing fancy.
Just scratching my own itch and sharing in case anyone finds them useful.
https://crates.io/crates/ctrlassist
Whether your helping grandparents through tough boss fights, or co-oping with nieces and nephews to level age gaps, CtrlAssist aims to make PC gaming on Linux fun and accessible for everyone. While I’m certain similar utilities exist, I also just wanted a holiday hobby project to practice Rust development while scratching a personal itch.
Please give it a try, share your feedback in the relevant discussion categories, or check out the open issues if you’d like to contribute, help is always welcome!
- Developer Feedback and Rust Community Discussion
- https://github.com/ruffsl/CtrlAssist/discussions/14 ;
- User Feedback and Accessibility Community Discussion - https://github.com/ruffsl/CtrlAssist/discussions/15A Raycast porting to the terminal. It will let you run Raycast extensions as TUI apps. Powered by opentui
- https://github.com/yassi/dj-redis-panel - https://github.com/yassi/dj-cache-panel
This week I'm taking a break from my next project in this series (celery related) to try to participate in game jam related to programming language creation:
- https://itch.io/jam/langjamgamejam
I encourage others to participate I e
Currently building out support for multi-agent evals, better tracing, voice, and static code analysis for AI security use cases. So many fun sub-problems in this space - LLM testing is deceptively hard.
If you end up checking it out and pick up an issue, I'll happily send swag. We're also hiring if you want to work on this stuff full-time.
[0] https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/a/a8/Guitar_M...
[1] https://issuu.com/orfeomagazine/docs/arias_livre
That last link is almost the entire book, have not looked through the digital version yet but on a quick look I think it is everything but the portfolio of his work.
Current development at https://github.com/asfaload/asfasign/
- Arduino dev and circuitry
- 3D printing
- PCB design
- Woodworking
Its all a lot of fun and IMO a lot more approachable than it has been thanks to the assist from LLMs.
Recently it hit v2.0 spec conformance. 3.0 is next on the roadmap. (I'm executing it against the upstream spec test suite.)
I don't plan to make it a highly-performant decoder for use in production environments, but rather one that can be used for educational purposes, easy to read and/or debugging issues with modules. That's why I decided not to offer a streaming API, and why I'll be focusing on things like good errors, good code docs etc.
P.S. I'm new to the language so any feedback is more than welcome.
I started to look at the wasm stuff, but all the documentation I found was so high-level as to be meaningless.
What do you recommend for someone who would want to be able to create or read .wasm files?
But I occasionally saw one or two articles around where they explain how the binary format works, which could be a good introduction before jumping to the spec.
I've rewritten this project (almost) completely three times and now doing it for the fourth time, with tests and best practices.
I would be incredibly grateful for any feedback what I'm missing with it.
So far it has been great fun and I have learnt an incredible range of things!
I'm curious why you're rewriting it for a fourth time? Am I playing version 3 or 4 right now?
Two potential suggestions:
1. You save the game on pause / tab close, it means I'm not able to continue from another device. Would it be possible to provide some form of "seed" that I could input in my other device to continue where I left off? Not sure if that's even possible, just an idea.
2. Option to toggle between mobile/desktop style cards. I understand the desktop style ones might look a bit small on mobile, but I would prefer it.
Great work and site bookmarked.
"Seeding/sharable link" idea is bound to daily game feature – and this is a next feature pack going out in Q1 next year.
Card switch is also in the roadmap, it is part of the non-existent (for now) settings system.
Appreciate for the kind words! Stay tuned!
A big part of this was inspired by the last startup I worked at. In an effort to not deal with complexities of Kubernetes, we ended up on Heroku and was charged exorbitant amounts of money. One year spending close to 400k on Heroku alone, for what should’ve been 10-15k in cloud costs.
I think a big part of this is just making Kubernetes more friendly and easier to use for a small / midsized team of developers.
The goal is to make it easy enough for even a single developer to feel comfortable with, while also being powerful enough to be able to support a small team
Portainer sponsors us, to keep us working full time on it.
Shoot me a note at chris @ canine<dot>sh
Would love to help in any way I can! Always looking for more adoption, esp at medium sized companies
Most recently released one was My Vocab Quest[1], a vocab mastery app with lots of word packs. It uses some gamification mechanics to make sure the user puts in the reps.
Current apps in the hopper are centered around:
(1) Recovery from cosmetic surgery. There are several balls to juggle for days, weeks, and months after a surgery. The app helps the user follow surgeon instructions, promoting physical and mental recovery, as well as medical and dietary changes. Makes use of phone features including contacts, calendar events, notifications. I’m learning to build an App Clip for it and hope to partner with some surgeons to get it promoted in their offices.
(2) Assisting older Americans to be more independent for a little longer (a parent of mine has early stage dementia). Helping the user maintain a regular schedule, take their medications on time.
(3) A dating ideas / meal ideas and agreement app. It helps increase creativity for date ideas, learns from how predictable you are, and facilitates agreement between the users.
[1] https://apps.apple.com/us/app/my-vocab-quest/id6748546703
https://okaleniuk.codeberg.page/blackboard/
The idea here is, one can pick the slides they want and arrange them into a sequence right in the URL. This way, there is no registration, no user data collection, no persistent state even. You just pick the slides, teach your material, and move on.
It's very raw, I still want to add a convenient sequence constructor, a "blank" slide so you could display your own content in it, and a similar quiz page. But I already used some of the slides for teaching, students seem to like them.
Hopefully, I'll have the rest done by the beginning of the spring semester.
htvend is a tool to help you capture any internet dependencies needed in order to perform a task.
It builds a manifest of internet assets needed, which you can check-in with your project.
The idea being that this serves as an upstream package lock file for any asset type, and that you can re-use this to rebuild your application if the upstream assets are removed, or if you are without internet connectivity.
Has an experimental GitHub action to integrate within your GitHub build, archiving assets to S3.
I've building PaaS focused on development environments. I think there are so many things to be improved all throughout the development process:
1. starting from creating new ones
2. forking existing one (like one would do with the git repo) to experiment with new ideas or debug the issue in an isolated environment
3. being config defined and reproducible
4. hybrid by default - run as much or as little one desires on their personal machine while keeping rest of the env (db, storage, ...) in the cloud
5. easy to share: expose services (HTTP/TCP/UDP) on public or private networks
6. have any number of AI agents with specific goals be part of the dev env
I'd like to try crypto, which coin/chain/wallet is the most used? USDT on TRX? Binance?
Any advice is welcome as this industry is definitely not easy to enter
I've been working as an ERP developer for a couple years now and the job is so dull and boring that I'm already starting to feel stagnant. So, I am learning more advanced things now in order to: 1. Advance my career, and 2. Maybe code some linux tool (for personal use only, for now!) and stop looking at enterprise code.
However had, on my todo list ... a few things that are important to me are there.
One is to create some kind of pseudo-language that can model biological cells, from A to Z. I am having something similar to erlang in mind (to some extent). Now, this is nothing new - modeling is quite old, bioinformatics is old, but I have a few ideas that are somewhat novel IMO (e. g. really following erlang here, just adapted to biological systems).
Then I have a few smaller ideas. One is to finish a webframework where everything is really an object at all times. Meaning, I can work with objects when describing a webpage, from A to Z. HTML tags are objects too. I don't typically use them directly, though, but more in a meta-layout, e. g. I want to describe a webpage, but on a higher level, and also push that down into a .pdf file then seamlessly. My goal here is to be able to work with objects everywhere, not just for a single webpage but for all local and remote webpages, a bit similar to Alan Kay's old ideas.
I have a couple more ideas (one is the widgets project where I want to describe a GUI only once and then have it work in as many variants and languages as possible), but realistically I also focus on the smaller things to do as they are much easier to solve. Right now it is more important to me to finish as much as possible before the end of the year, so prioritising on smaller things makes more sense.
Along the way I found most of these use salvaged BlackBerry keyboards which are only going to become harder to find, so also on a bit of a side quest to build a thumb-sized keyboard from scratch. Got me into laying out and prototyping my first PCBs and learning about how these things are made - lots of fun so far!
Something cool I learned from tearing apart a BB keyboard: the satisfying “click” is just a tiny metal dome that pops and completes the circuit when pressed. Not news to anyone familiar with electronics manufacturing, but it was a cool thing to “discover.”
It is supposed to implement all kinds of features, that I usually miss in vocabulary learning applications, such as a very powerful search function, and the ability to add arbitrary tags, a table of words, and learning progress statistics (not yet implemented).
It has minimalistic dependencies. Currently the only non-development dependency it has is jsonschema.
I keep the configuration of the application in a JSON file. This configuration already allows to configure many things, like for example the various learn levels, and what their meaning in terms of the spaced repetition system is, which attributes of a word will be revealed in what order, when practicing, what attributes to show in the columns of the vocabulary table, and what font to use for the big character display widget (useful for languages like Chinese).
It's AGPL, so feel free to fork, but adhere to the license.
an iOS app that unlocks the hidden sensors in your AirPods, turning them into a real-time AI posture coach for work and workouts on iOS.
The failure mode I keep hitting: once you give an agent tools, it gets ambient authority over all of them. There's no clean way to say "for this task, read-only on the reports table" or "spin up no more than 3 VMs." When the agent spawns sub-agents mid-execution, they inherit full access by default.
IAM doesn't help much. Authority stays tied to the agent's identity even as intent shifts during execution.
I'm exploring a capability-based model instead: authority is explicit, task-scoped, and attenuating. Closest to Macaroons/Biscuit, but adapted for workflows where delegation happens dynamically mid-task.
Early prototype (Rust core, Python SDK, LangChain integration), still thinking it through. Notes here: https://niyikiza.com/posts/capability-delegation/
I came to the same realization a while ago and started building an agent runtime designed to ensure all (I/O) effects are capability bound and validated by policies, while also allowing the agent to modify itself.
Eidetica - a decentralized database built in Rust, intended for local-first apps. It's still unstable but I'm progressing relatively rapidly. In the past ~month I have:
- Flown to SF to attend a conference in this niche: https://syncconf.dev/
- Added password based, transparent, end-to-end encryption
- Improved my custom CRDTs
- Added an index to store configs and metadata
- Built support for using sqlite + postgres for Eideticas backend (not pushed yet)
Once I finish the backend work I'll hopefully take a bit of a break though. I'm supposed to be retired.
We run them on bare metal without VM brittleness, fully GPU-accelerated with WebRTC streaming using hardware encoder. As good as it gets and it’s amazed every single person who tried it.
Still behind waitlist, give me a heads up at hello@limrun.com to try it out.
This is a developers tool, that can be used during development to seamlessly integrate mocks and changes into existing systems. Or easily expose internal work through a public tunnel. Or if been in an position where its hard to push to staging, pre-prod or other environments because of many competing constraints, then this product may help.
I love global voice-to-text transcription (especially when working with Claude Code or Cursor) and simple AI shortcuts like "Fix Grammar" and "Translate to {Language}".
I realized I was spending around €35/mo (€420 a year) on two apps for AI features that cost just pennies to run.
So I built Ottex - a native macOS app with a tiny footprint. Add your OpenRouter API key and get solid voice-to-text using Gemini 2.5 Flash, plus any OpenRouter model for AI shortcuts.
I made a platform for innovators, founders, developers to validate their idea against real users (not AI).
My purpose to build this platform is two-pronged–first to solve the "Power Law", in simple terms, where platforms such as Instagram, Reddit, YouTube, TikTok, etc. only put forward the popular content (most upvoted, liked, viewed, trending, etc.) and people who are posting regularly are still left behind fighting for some interactions.
Second, to provide a platform for people, innovators such as myself, who keep asking the question "is this worth working on? worth spending time and money on". There are subreddits with hundreds of thousands of followers and Redditors and many of them are still not getting the visibility they need to start.
I remember that I had a lot of ideas throughout high school but I wasn't able to get real answers and validation from people so I dropped it. So specially for those people who need a little bit more visibility.
So trying to solve that.
Anyway, for a lot of reasons that don't matter now, the time has come to rebuilt | reinvent | reinvigorate this thing. So for the last week, I've just been working on updating dependencies, fixing the resultant breakages, and also fixing miscellaneous bugs that had never been fixed (or possibly even noticed) before.
As of today I have most of the base functionality up and working again. I just got all the Quartz scheduling stuff set back up and now I'm testing the scheduled job that fetches data from RSS feeds and creates associated records based on the contents of those items.
Up next: test|fix some functionality around defining "semantic assertions" about entities in the system (using Apache Jena) and then I'll at least be back where I was.
After that, I have some UI improvements to make (the UI now is basic GSP pages with Bootstrap and jQuery), and then some GenAI integration stuff. Beyond that: who knows?
Besides that...
Ref this thread: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46252283
I did pick up Volume 1 of "The Handbook of Artificial Intelligence" earlier this afternoon and read about 25 pages. I've also been working my way through "Parallel Distributed Processing - Volume 2" and "Principles of Semantic Networks" for the past few weeks, so continuing to grind on both of those as well.
Getting ready to release a 1.0.0 of sanctum [1], after almost a year of internal testing, dogfooding and talking about it at security conferences.
We've also setup conclave [2] as an official release site for the projects tied to sanctum such as tier6, or the library implementation of the protocol etc.
How are you going about learning about the LibreOffice APIs?
https://chromewebstore.google.com/detail/majhgbekihmliceijip...
It lets you open links in a side panel, so you can quickly look at a page without leaving what you’re reading. I built it because I tend to open too many tabs when reading docs or search results.
It supports a few simple triggers. My favorite one is long-click: you click and hold a link, and the preview opens in the side panel.
Chrome recently added Split View that you open from the context menu. It works, but for quick checks it feels a bit heavy. You have to right-click, move the mouse, and pick an option.
With long-click there’s no menu. For me it feels faster, more intentional, and better when scanning lots of links.
Most of the work lately is about polishing these interactions and dealing with browser edge cases.
I've been working through advent of code using my own little compiler/language. It's in such an early state that some creative problem solving is required, not to mention the compiler bugs! But I'm very pleased to have it running interactively on my blog like this – I want to work towards some bigger notebooks in the style of explorable explanations.
It's intended to be anti-memetic, and anti-guilt trip. Just put it on your watch, install a program (open format) and you never need the phone itself. Your workout is a holiday from your phone.
The data can be exported if you want to use it elsewhere.
I originally made it for ROCKNIX but as there was no way to share the app I paid the Apple tax :/
I am using a very different tech stack for it. It is written in Clojure.
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46262540
A few technical details I enjoyed working on:
* Streaming ZIP: To allow downloading multiple files as a single archive without buffering, I implemented a custom streaming ZIP64 archiver. A Service Worker intercepts the request, fetches encrypted chunks, decrypts them, and constructs the ZIP stream on the fly in the browser.
* OPAQUE auth: I used the OPAQUE protocol (via serenity-kit) for the password-authenticated key exchange. It ensures the server never learns the password and protects weak passwords against offline attacks if the DB leaks.
* Passkey PRF auth: If your passkey provider supports PRF (like iCloud Keychain or Windows Hello), the app derives the data encryption key directly from the passkey, allowing a login flow that doesn't require entering a master password.
Also, aero.zip is a webapp, i.e. there's nothing to install, and you don't even need to sign up to send small files. Meanwhile, croc is a CLI utility which will be hard to use by mom-and-pop users.
The goal is basically to be a self hosted, open source alternative to Synadia Cloud’s BYON feature.
The whole project is shipped as a single Go binary with an embedded UI developed with Svelte. Has been a lot of fun to work on!
My Civil 3D plugin will:
1. Make standard, market-compliant catalogs and polished styles available to engineers at large. Think of it as the WordPress theme provider equivalent.
2. Make the entire process easy and painless through the plugin, with prominent buttons for quick access.
If the plugin is done well, there will be less need for BIM modelers, since for a fee, engineers could simply purchase catalogs and styles that are so easy to use they require no technical training.
As a side benefit, I also get to explore how LLMs can help me write code. It has been a while since I last updated my AI usage policy [0], and I look forward to revisiting it.
Open-source theatre tech cueing software (I don't want to use MacOS to run QLabs)
Any plans on supporting video playback and rudimentary keystoning? The audio features in qlabs are alright, the video is its killer feature that similar software often touted as alternatives lack.
It runs as a terminal application, meaning that you just need to run it from your terminal, but you can try the game over ssh without installing: `ssh frittura.org -p 3788`
downloads: https://rebels.frittura.org/ repo: https://github.com/ricott1/rebels-in-the-sky
None of the frontier LLMs (Gemini, ChatGPT, Claude) produce usable designs when just prompted with some photos of the pump and a written description of the mount. I'm now building a simulator in Mujoco that the LLMs can use to test and iterate on their designs to see if they can do better in this setting.
I'm hoping to make an interesting blog post of it and maybe end up with a usable wall mount design.
As an engineer working on networking and fiddle with various networking OS on router and switch, I finally port my favorite fd.io vpp to darwin platform and built a app to management multiple VPN/Proxy in one profile.
Also in this project I start writing some rust code with many years experience in C but rust's memory and high performance really impressed me a lot.
For most people this is silly but I am super happy that it works.
A fresh PWA to log / improve your coffee brewing process. We use it to see what we are all drinking, find new coffees, explore new cafes, and understand what we like / don’t like.
It’s primarily used by our group of friends, so if you see a rough edge somewhere please reach out!
termsheet - a Google Sheets client for the terminal
Also PolyGen, an app for “low poly” wallpapers - I’ve sent an update with bug fixes for latest devices and iOS versions; it’s currently being reviewed, when you read this it might be live.
This allows library authors to do more, like defining webhook handlers and (simple) database operations. The idea is to move complexity from the library user to the author, making (API) integrations easier.
I think libraries being able to write to your database is a pretty powerful concept, and can enable a number of interesting use cases.
Volatility regime models (Markov-switching GARCH, regime-switching stochastic volatility) are ubiquitous in finance. However, they share a fundamental limitation: regimes are identified ex post from return dynamics, providing no predictive power for regime transitions. The standard approach fits a Hidden Markov Model to returns, labels high and low volatility states, and estimates state transition probabilities that are essentially unconditional averages. This matters because the economic value of volatility timing depends entirely on predicting regime changes before they occur. A model that identifies regimes only after observing the returns is useless for trading volatility.
Existing research documents regime-dependent behavior but does not identify causal drivers of regime transitions. The papers on volatility forecasting factors, variance risk premium dynamics, and market instability from option flows dance around this question without directly addressing it. The recent work on causal ML in finance (double machine learning, causal forests) has focused primarily on equity return prediction rather than volatility states. The connection between options market variables and subsequent volatility regime transitions has not been rigorously established through causal methods.
We develop a causal framework for volatility regime prediction using option-implied variables as potential causes of regime transitions. The key insight is that options markets are forward-looking, so information embedded in the implied volatility surface, put-call ratios, option order flow, and term structure slopes may causally influence future realized volatility regimes rather than merely correlate with them.
Currently building a robust dataset.
Upload a CSV or circle neighborhoods on Google Maps to build your address list (consumers or businesses). Printing and postage included in one price.
In the last 30 days I've added an API plus integrations for Pipedrive, Zoho, and Follow Up Boss. If anyone wants to help test these new integrations, I'll set you up on a special plan and let you send mail at my cost (roughly the price of a stamp).
Instantly create your Tiktok/Instagram-like app for your community or brand
I've had the idea sitting in my notes for years now. It waited patiently until I could get back to it.
Testeranto: The AI-powered BDD test framework for polyglot projects.
Teseranto is test framework that integrates with LLMs to bring together BDD and vibe coding
I haven't yet tried this very extensively - but another profound change in programming that this showed me is that it is now very easy to borrow parts of Open Source libraries. It used to be that you could only base your work on a library - borrowing parts of projects that were not designed to be shared (used as libraries) was prohibitive - but with llms it is entirely possible to say: "now please borrow the UI ideas from project X" and it does that. Maybe you need to add some planning.
The project is about 27kloc now.
Curious if anyone would find this useful: https://github.com/rbagchi/git-dataframe-tools
You can find the technical details at https://wireplug.org
I started off trying to make it a service to help people who are interested in ADU's get connected with architects/ contractors but spent a lot of time working on the interactive map to explore related ideas. The site is here buildbound.xyz and map here buildbound.xyz/map. Right now for example, it's very hard to tell if your site qualifies for the TOD upzoning portion of the City of Yes so maybe there is room to crunch those kind of numbers and provide it as a public service.
Trying to decide to keep going down the ADU route in NYC, even though the market is really early here, expand to NY State/ California where the ADU market is a bit further along or keep doubling down on making the best interactive zoning/ land use map in NYC and see if there is any product market fit to be found.
[1]https://www.nyc.gov/content/planning/pages/our-work/plans/ci...
Not related, misguided methods :D
I’ve been playing around with the Whisper models for a few years now. Last year I had an idea about how to run Whisper Large v3 in real time. That idea became ScribeAI.
Because the quality of transcripts was so high, much higher than I could get with Parakeet, I started to think about how it would serve as a good input for live translation. I played around with this and was surprised by how good the results is, I’ve used it to follow along political speech’s from foreign leaders and other content I’d have just never been able to consume before. You can translate by bringing your own LLM service API key or using the inbuilt Apple Translate models (for a completely offline experience).
https://apps.apple.com/gb/app/scribeai-transcribe-speech/id6...
It looks inside each file to see what it’s about, then moves it to 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.
If you have messy folders anywhere on your Mac, Floxtop can help.
Floxtop suggests the top 5 destination folders where a file could best belong. You stay fully in control: you can choose one of the suggestions, move files individually or in bulk (Move All), or select a completely custom folder location at any time.
If you change your mind, you can Undo per file or use Undo All to revert the entire operation.
I’m building it on Cloudflare Workers with advanced tracking, modern templates, and advanced webhook integration. Developers can also configure and schedule advanced workflows for their specific needs
The users can review their usage and performance using an intuitive dashboard.
Email is a crowded space and this is my first attempt at doing something indie at this scale. Wish me luck!
Is that a commonly requested use case for AWS SES users?
Not coding related, I've been on what I've been calling "The Grand Project" for a bit over a year now where I listen to every single album I own (around 855 albums/singles/eps/etc. As of this moment I'm at 828) at least once. It's been a real trip essentially going through my whole life musically and I'm hoping to write a blog post somewhere about it.
[0] Project site: https://primamateria.systems/ Source Code: https://github.com/stryan/materia
I started about 2 months ago, found 2 early adopters and focusing on making them really happy.
I'd prefer LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/bpetryshyn/
X also works: https://x.com/bohdance
I'm working on a new kind of DAP (Digital Audio Player) with the focus being on a better visual experience to go alongside the music. Post going in-depth here: https://substack.com/home/post/p-181321780
Check it out at: https://addons.subly.xyz & https://subly.xyz
The Firefox addon/Chrome extension is free, but you need your own OpenRouter/Gemini API key. The cost of web translation is really low, you can translate an article for ~$0.01 with really good quality. (You can try at https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/subly-xyz/)
I built it because I use Firefox the most and it seemed like no translate addon was good or simple enough. Chrome translate kinda works, but the quality is so low; it usually doesn't understand the article context.
I'm rewriting from scratch : https://github.com/stratdev3/SimpleW/releases/tag/REWRITE
Working on Chorebound - an RPG-style chore/habit app. You do real-world chores, they become quests, you fight monsters, get loot drops, earn XP/gold, and level up. Can be solo or co-op with friends/family.
If you’ve used Habitica and bounced off, this is meant to be more lightweight, simplified, and focused on closer-knit co-op rather than public guilds.
Releasing in the next few weeks.
Porting/reimplementing a Tcl interpreter from C to Zig, based on the design of Jimtcl. This is one of those sub-projects that started due to another project (folk.computer in this case). The biggest difference is thread-safe value sharing, and (soon to be) lexical variable capture.
But why? Right now folk.computer has about a 20% overhead of serializing and deserializing values as they get sent between threads, and it's also meant we can't sent large amounts of data around. I previously attempted to make the Jimtcl interpreter thread-safe, but it ended up being slower than the status quo. So, I started hacking on a new interpreter.
Commands evaluate, basic object operations are in place, but there's still a ton of work to do in order to implement core commands. It may even be good enough to swap in some day!
https://chromewebstore.google.com/detail/github-pr-pretty-li...
Platform for sharing Magic the Gathering EDH games.
It’s “Hotwire for command-line apps”, meaning you can ship a CLI in a Rails app without building an API. The dream is to make it work for all major web frameworks.
Terminalwire streams stdio, browser launch commands, and a few more things needs to ship a CLI for a SaaS quickly.
The best part is when you want to ship a feature for the CLI, you don’t have to worry about pushing out updates to clients and making sure it’s compatible with your API.
A more interesting development are companies that are using it as a replacement for MCP in AI stacks. They’re reporting less token usage and better overall results.
I wrote about it here: https://pcmaffey.com/custom-ssg/
Forkable template: https://github.com/pcmaffey/bun-ssg
> Staring at the errors in my CLI, I realized I did not want to use another framework. It's why I had already discarded the idea of switching to Astro. Twiddling around someone else's abstractions and incentives, frustrations fitting together the final 20% of a project... I've been down that road too many times before. It's never fun. The tradeoffs _you don't know you're making_ are the biggest risk.
Parents set up accounts, kids log in with simple codes and work through curriculum-aligned Math and German exercises. Built with Elixir/Phoenix/Ash and LiveView.
The hard part isn't the tech - it's creating content that actually maps to the German school curriculum rather than generic "educational" fluff. Currently grinding through grade 2 math topics.
* GodotJS — https://github.com/godotjs/GodotJS — TypeScript for Godot
* Consulting for companies using GodotJS (and Unity).
* The immediate-mode "every tick I ask you for a VDOM based on the user-defined state" TUI framework has all the fundamental features, I think; writing docs and expanding the library of components it ships with. https://github.com/Smaug123/WoofWare.Zoomies
* Decided I needed a nice text display widget, so got side-tracked into implementing the Knuth-Plass paragraph layout algorithm; it currently functions but is buggy. https://github.com/Smaug123/WoofWare.KnuthPlass
* Finally starting to put proper effort into the LLM integrations into my workflows, writing skills, defining the Gospel According To Me to try and poke the LLMs into the right basin - with limited success so far. https://github.com/Smaug123/gospel
No progress on the deterministic .NET runtime.
(Same comment from last month: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45869787)
It’s a meditation app where an LLM guides you without the usual back-and-forth chat. You set your preferences up front (style, duration, focus), then it delivers a structured session end-to-end.
I have a long list of ideas and features to try, but right now I’m focused on feedback. The app is live on the App Store, and I’d love input on: • What would make you try an AI-guided meditation app (or avoid it)? • What settings matter most to you (duration, tone, technique, background audio, etc.)? • What would make the guidance feel trustworthy and not “chatty” or generic?
If you’re willing to test it, I’m especially interested in first-session impressions and what you’d change to make it something you’d actually keep using.
Now I may tolerate that if you are significantly cheaper than the alternatives but that doesn’t seem to be the case.
This December, I reached a huge milestone: I implemented ASN1 tree editing [1]. Now I can edit the ASN1 tree directly in the browser (read my blog post for more details: [2]).
I'm happy that I wrote this tool. I use it often to help me debug my protocol implementations and/or debugging. I know that some of my friends use the JWT debugger and ASN1 parser from this tool. Maybe some of you will find it helpful too.
[0]: https://crypto.qkation.com/
[1]: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46255464
[2]: https://tbt.qkation.com/posts/announcing-crypto-helper-0-16/
Learn more at https://github.com/openspend/openspend
The flow is you declare the databases and tables you want to access and the specific permissions you want, an operator reviews it, if accepted it generates a temporary postgres user with those permissions you need. Also, all the connections to the database are proxied through the app, so the domain name and port are random and short-lived, so you don't expose internal database hosts. As an extra, all SQL statements during the user sessions are logged if you want to see that.
It's available at https://github.com/yungwarlock/pam_postgres
My primary goal of this is to drill myself as a product engineer working on a technical product.
I’ve been mostly vibe coding RecurAt (https://recur.at) to get a feel for coding this way and been learning a ton about frontend development at the same time.
Next.js app hosted on Vercel.
This is a model trained as static embeddings from the gemma 3 token embeddings.
And I completed a pretty long technical article on my personal blog that goes pretty deep into SSE + Postgres + v8 + some linux kernel stuff: https://sam.elborai.me/articles/how-sse-actually-works-deno-...
Some other projects I'm currently motivated by
- pls, my take on what my ideal release automation tool would be (currently deno only): https://github.com/dgellow/pls
- steady, an OpenAPI spec validator and mock server: https://github.com/dgellow/steady
A new vertically integrated operating system and computer for the next generation.
Working on the native language and OS currently!
1) https://github.com/radusuciu/snakemake-executor-plugin-aws-b... (my fork). Just add the features to the batch job building code 2) https://github.com/radusuciu/snakemake-executor-plugin-aws-b.... This is more experimental and not yet fully working. I wanted to try a few things. a) can we rely on existing job definitions (managed through IaC instead). b) can we implement a fire-and-forget model where the main snakemake process runs on Batch as well? c) Can we slim down the snakemake container by stripping off unnecessary features.
I got frustrated on how difficult it is to compare many elections using alternative voting methods against each other, so ended up extending a friends project, adding more results, details and statistics.
Just added datasette lite to the approval voting site. it’s pretty cool to query the SQLite db in the browser. https://approval.vote/data
I'm working on a beginner-friendly online programming language for teenagers who want to learn to code. I think there is not a clear enough winner for what teenagers should do after they learn Scratch so I am trying to make it.
When you say "what teenagers should do after learning Scratch," what do you mean exactly? Should do to what end? How would Easel present as "the clear thing" they should do? I suppose Scratch wasn't really chosen by these young people; it is obviously simple, and has the prestige of MIT. Schools followed suit.
You're in a different situation, where you have to meet this market in the open. When I visit your site, I am met with code. It's not apparently simple, and a beginner wouldn't be able to distinguish it from any other games programming framework. I think it's actually scarier-seeming to a beginner than something like Godot's scene editor, where you can just drag images from your disk into a prototype-view of your game-scene.
I hope my plainness in stating this isn't taken as an insult. You've got so much work there, and the site is impressive. I also care about this topic, age-range and the learning process, so I'm trying to be helpful with my perspective.
Maybe I'll rewind a bit, and I'm sorry if this is a long post!
I've just had a teenager who finished making a Chess game in Easel after about a month's work, his most advanced programming project so far. This teenager started in Scratch, has done some Python, but the language they have spent the most time in has been Easel. I've also had a couple of teenagers who have said things like "I suck at coding" and yet make spend months making these quite sophisticated Easel projects full of coding. These two teenagers also did a bit of Scratch but also were lost and disengaged when it came to Python. This mirrors what I've seen in Code Clubs as well, where teenagers just lost interest when shown Python.
Eventually, if someone is going to learn to code for real, they must make the transition from a visual programming language to a text-based programming language, and I know that I have seen teenagers get lost attempting to cross that gap. There are teenagers who obviously have had no trouble with this and that's great, they should go straight to Python or JavaScript or whatever is their heart's desire!
The difference between Scratch and most other programming languages is more than just visual vs text-based. Scratch is actually this cool concurrent, asynchronous, event-driven programming language. This makes it easy to write things like "wait 0.3 seconds" then "move 2 steps to the right". Most other game engines, including PyGame and Godot, instead use a frame-by-frame model. This means you often have to code things as state machines, where you pick up and put down state so that an entity can remember what it was doing next frame. That example of "wait 0.3 seconds" then "move 2 steps to the right" would require the control flow to jump up and down the codebase between state and logic, which means the shape of the code no longer mirrors the step-by-step of what it is actually doing. I think Scratch is successful not just because of its visual coding, but because its programming model allows for step-by-step logic to look like step-by-step code. There's no reason a text-based programming language couldn't also have this property.
Easel is concurrent, asynchronous, event-driven, like Scratch, which is why both Easel and Scratch code can be written in this sequential step-by-step way that you can't easily achieve in other programming languages.
Why can't you just write `await sleep(0.3s)` in other programming languages? Their issue is you can't cancel an `await`, which means it is easy for an asynchronous task to outlive its entity and so they are not safe beginner-level constructs. Scratch solves this implicitly because all scripts are part of a sprite, and when your sprite is removed, all its concurrent scripts stop. It's so intuitive that it doesn't really need to be taught. Easel has a similar thing but in text-based form - it is a hierarchical programming language and everything inside of an entity's block`{ }` gets auto-cleaned up when it dies, including all asynchronous tasks belonging to that entity. I think that's why in Easel, I've seen teenagers spinning up hundreds of asynchronous threads all the time without any problems.
All of this is to say that Easel is like halfway between Scratch and Python. It keeps a lot of the intuitive parts of Scratch's cool programming model, but in text form. My hope (and we have seen this already a few times) is that it can help more teenagers cross the gap from visual coding to "grown up" text-based programming languages.
The reason the code sample is at the top is actually because I saw a teenager talk aloud as they were reading that code and understanding it in real-time. It was super cool because that's it, that's what I've been trying to do - make a text-based programming language that is legible to beginners and not convoluted. And I'm trying to figure out whether it is possible to replicate that moment over and over again with new teenagers.
There is a lot more to it. Easel adds a lot of other stuff like a physics engine and automatic multiplayer. But this post is getting long so I will stop there. I really appreciate the thoughts. I am definitely going to be thinking about how that homepage is presenting itself and I think it is fair what you say that it doesn't look simple, and doesn't look different to any other game engine. That is very good feedback!
I tried once 7 years ago but ran into major audio issues that were a deal breaker but I'm hoping the Linux kernel has improved. I have the same hardware as before.
My dotfiles have been public for many years and can 1 shot a new or existing system in a few minutes with a bunch of command line tools on Debian, Ubuntu, Arch (with or without WSL 2) and macOS. It has an install script and theme switching for a long time which I've used to set up a a few systems (personal desktop, laptop and work laptop).
I've been casually tweaking a laptop running Arch with niri. I'm preparing a bunch of things in my https://github.com/nickjj/dotfiles to prepare for that push which will work on Arch Linux and be opt-in to install and configure a GUI and assorted tools.
A gamified approach that gradually introduces characters.
As I'm currently in Osaka I can use my own app well :) Hoping to make learning Japanese more fun.
It's here: https://app.tolearnjapanese.com
It's based on my simple web app to learn Korean vocabulary. I'm taking elements from Anki and other language learning apps, but making it focused so it works well in a broader language learning journey.
For learning Korean vocabulary: https://game.tolearnkorean.com
Have also been writing about these in my monthly mail-letter: https://bryanhogan.com/follow
A fiat to crypto payment gateway for businesses and freelancers without a strict KYC. Users can pay using card and merchants can claim instant crypto settlement[1].
WIP: a casino algorithm that outperforms most casino algorithms in terms of user retention over a long period of time with the objective function of maximizing long term profit.
[0]: https://xclip.in [1]: https://obliqpay.com
It's a CLI Framework for running evaluations against LLMs.
Tech is too addictive now. We need to get back to utility value. I'm trying to build an alternative with myself as user 1.
https://github.com/novotimo/tlsproxy
This is still in development (todo are privilege dropping, in place config reloads, log burst suppression, multiple listen sockets (which paired with the Linux kernel gives free load balancing capabilities), and detailed TLS configurability), but it already matches both nginx and HAProxy’s speed (entirely bottlenecked by OpenSSL crypto by this point) at a tiny fraction of the attack surface and memory footprint (10-15kb per worker process last time I checked).
If anyone wants to take a look, please roast my code :)
You get to choose the genres you're interested in, and it creates playlists from the music in your library. They get updated every day - think a better version of the Daily Mixes. You can add some advanced filters as well, if you really want to customise what music you'll get.
The reason for it was because after testing multiple Git history explorers, I still think nothing beats the gitk. Sublime Merge is probably the only alternative that I would seriously consider but I don't really like the UI and the fact that it is proprietary (I am not against proprietary software but I prefer an opensource solution when available). Other alternatives have some bugs or the interface few too slow. gitk itself is mostly fine, but sadly it tries to load the whole repository in memory and this is causing issues every time I try to navigate through nixpkgs (I can see the memory consumption going through the roof while the UI slow down to a crawl).
gitk-go loads a batch of commits (1000 by default) and once you get at the end of the list it loads more. I also add a few features that I miss from gitk, for example if you do any change in the repository (change branches, add files to stash, etc) it will automatically reflect in the UI.
Again, the code is mostly vibecoded since this is the first time I decided to try this from scratch. The code works well for my use cases and it is enough to replace gitk for me, but I can't guarantee there is no bugs and the amount of tests are small. But still, it was fun to see something that I wanted to create for a while (I had this idea for a long time since the issues with gitk that I was having) finally taking form. Probably the program is not useful for anyone but me, but if anything this is a feature, not a bug.
A kanji typing game. Vibe coded it in two evenings.
Open source metaverse. Just added rideable jetskis!
Written in C++ and OpenGL. Works on the web as well via Emscripten, WASM and WebGL.
The problem I'm solving: On a team, people and their files are scattered everywhere.
Solution: A canvas that attempts to open (and edit) as many file types as possible (images, xlsx, pdf, docx, cad). This means you can have people and files on the same page.
It's the only whiteboard that can natively render docx and pdf so far; these can also be edited directly on the board without having to use dedicated software.
It has a built-in Drive where you can store/backup files that syncs across your devices.
There's a few widgets such as Kanban, sticky notes, cards.
And of course, there's agentic LLM (Gemini 3 Pro) that can take actions such as viewing the board, reading documents on the board, and editing items on the board. For example, you can tell it to read a pdf, then write a spec sheet (in docx), or create tickets on a kanban.
I'm launching a private beta next month if anyone is interested in testing it out and giving feedback.
It allows anyone with ideas for engaging content to become a content creator without having to appear in front of the camera.
It's a way of working/tools for working with an LLM that allow you to track decision tree graphs, have the robot make more informed decisions and build its own logical chain for history keeping, and modeling all the work as a DAG of events, goals, outcomes, decisions, and observations that network together to allow you to work better/smarter/faster, giving it a living and recorded memory and ways to explore all this.
It's easiest to check out the short demo on the site.
It also links to the live graph of how the tool has built itself.
So I have to ask, how well do you see it performing so far with regard to actually sticking to the data present in the system? Do you find the AI agents to adhere properly to the existing data?
On a similar note, can the "consensus" of the system be adjusted in a way where we keep the knowledge which was true at time T (decision provenance), but we avoid having that bit of information affect current decision making?
http://notactuallytreyanastasio.github.io/deciduous/story.ht...
the time-relevant stuff is all well beyond anything it does. It keeps confidence weights and decision paths and can analyze those.
I've also been using it at work with pretty great success.
I'd be interested in integrating this with bug systems of decisions / goals, with actions being comments on those bugs (for work purposes) instead of having a custom deciduous-only DB.
Is this meant to be open source? I don't see a LICENSE.
If you want the full list of projects (11 apps, 3 podcasts and some books) see https://www.emadibrahim.com
An independent blogging and personal website builder. Source available (Ruby on Rails).
It’s not a novel idea but it’s gaining decent traction because it’s simple and (I think!) makes you want to write more. Which is basically why I built it.
Blog by email, custom domains, internal private analytics, theming and more!
Free forever plan, or only $29/yr for everything. Priced as I think personal/blogging sites should be. Everything is too expensive these days.
Built using our full-stack library toolkit Fragno [0].
[0]: https://fragno.dev/
I'm currently improving this order queueing and sales recording web app for small coffee shops. Made primarily for my friend's coffee shop. Data is stored locally, and the app is fully functional when offline. There is an optional "syncing" feature to sync data with multiple devices which requires a sign up. This is a Progressive Web App built with Web Components. The syncing is made possible with PouchDB/CouchDB. Completely free to use.
I intend to make it "too cheap to pass", because we should all be able to monitor Certificate Transparency.
Email me if you want to be a design partner!
I also make interactive tools for artists at https://artres.xyz.
I've been super inspired by all the amazing things I've seen on Hacker News.
I found Comet so useful and I vibe coded my own version to seek AI possibility
Also on an live interactive quiz service: https://live.stingtao.info/?lang=en
This helped me host live event for 1,000 participants
Theres so much more to do in terms of reliability (bypassing bot detection) and onboarding new programs (right now, only American, jetBlue, Delta, Virgin Atlantic and Alaska are supported). But progress has been good and im excited about it. https://awardlocker.com
2. Sometimes a good post is ignored due to a bad title, sometimes I still have no idea what the post's theme even after I read a few paragraphs.
3. I want to filter out some posts I'm not interested in, but I realized I need read some other posts it's not a simple yes/no problem, so I gave every post a interesting score based on my own preference
so I built this tool to save my time while not missing out too much on hn
[0] https://apps.apple.com/us/app/reflect-track-anything/id64638...
My twins (in high school) and I are building an AI study buddy.The idea is simple. A peer-level “study friend” you can work alongside, ask questions, and stay on track with.
It’s not doing anything ChatGPT or Claude couldn’t do. The goal is packaging it into something that feels a high-schooler would actually want to use when they’re studying.
We are also using this as a weekly project to learn the abstract stuff. Product thinking, design, pricing, marketing, and how to turn a vague idea into something real. Each week the kids prioritize a feature, research it, write up the idea, and then we build (or cut) it together.
Our stack is Claude Code, TypeScript, React and it's hosted on Cloudflare Pages for frontend + Workers for API.
No login or credit card required to try this out. We welcome your feedback.
<3
The simplest web framework and site generator yet – no leaky abstractions between you and the high-performance engine that is a modern browser.
Recently a friend acquired a Collins KW-1 transmitter, serial number 1. I helped him get it working again after a long period of disuse by it's previous owner. You wouldn't believe how often it turns out that wires and bolts don't actually conduct electricity.
I would recommend following along the MIT OCW course or similar, doing the exercises. Use AI to help you follow the course and ask questions about things not clear to you.
This has most recently involved a side diversion into a little tree-processing library (where file hierarchies are a special case) — Show HN within the next day or two, fingers crossed — and setting up a fork of https://github.com/pypa/packaging to support EOL Python (back to 3.6) and make some general simplifications (because even this is a fairly large wheel compared to the target project size).
Hoping I can kick myself back into the blogging habit again soon, too.
I'm building a session prep tool for tabletop RPG game masters. The idea is to make a narrative engine rather than another static wiki. Most existing tools are great for storing lore, but they don't help you run the story. I wanted something that supports the "create now, refine later" workflow — get ideas into structure fast, then refine as you play.
Core features: - interconnected world-building (NPCs, factions, locations) and story-building (situations, fronts, clocks) - Bidirectional linking — connecting a story hook to an NPC makes that hook visible from the NPC's view - Clock system with milestone consequences that can spawn or edit entities - Situations fire different consequences based on outcome (players engaged vs. ignored the hook) - Material waste detection — flags under-connected content so you know what's prepped but unused.
The main workflow is mindmap-based. Each entity gets its own context layer showing direct relationships. (Soon available in demo version) Working on next: automatic player-facing content. As players complete situations, public notes from involved entities get published — so the GM doesn't have to maintain a separate campaign log.
Stack: TypeScript, Effect-TS, SolidJS, Cytoscape (graphs), Leaflet (maps)
The hosted version is rough — I've been using it to get early feedback from GM friends. Happy to hear thoughts from anyone who preps campaigns
- I’ve just started designs and initial setup for a personal productivity system heavily inspired by the Newton & HyperCard and built in Rust. Idea is to use LLMs to build GraphRAG-like connections between content & break out of the standard app+document model. My current thinking is having ‘frames’ of content (notes, sketches, events etc) that are acted on by capabilities and displayed in views (timeline, calendar, stack, knowledge graph etc).
- Also working on a static site generator and CMS webapp that creates sites that can be viewed on anything, from web browser to TUI. Like if Gemini or Gopher also rendered to html.
It can collide 96-bit truncated sha256 in under 24 hours on a 6700XT.
Next steps are a) figure out something interesting/useful to do with it (beyond surprising people), and b) modify it to support accepting contributions from untrusted clients (see "Future Ideas" in README). For a sufficiently interesting answer to a) I could create a "SETI@home"-like system.
A ~102-bit collision would cost $$ worth of rented GPU capacity, and 128-bit is optimistically possible with enough crowd-sourced compute (a ~5-figure dollar cost if you were renting).
still hosted on private GH: https://github.com/PiotrAleksander/open-notebook-mcp We will probably soon merge it to the main repo
I recently added pose tracking of the 3d model so I can overlay 3d effects onto the underlying video.
Here's a demo: https://mukba.ng/p?id=29265051-b9c7-400b-b15a-139ca5dfaf7e
You can think of it as a data source, or a knowledgeable companion that can provide comprehensive book information for online booksellers, libraries, book-related startups, bookworms, and more.
I got a pre-alpha build running for those that want to test it out and the code is out on SourceHut[1].
Been really tough to find time to work on it because I have a baby that only sleeps in my lap, but I’m making progress very slowly.
I recently hired someone to rewrite the entire database layer, as that was written with the help of an LLM for the prototype, which should improve things too.
Feedback is very welcome :)
Right now you can use it to chat about and modify basic things in your game; it automatically adds open scripts, scenes, and assets to your context, and uses around 50 MCP tools for editing. Currently working on refactoring the agent loop to use Claude Agent SDK so we can piggyback off the Claude Code developer experience and focus purely on the tool and integration side.
[0] https://ziva.sh
I’ve also been playing with Bun and I have a business idea that would be a good fit, and huge potential but I just don’t have enough time to start something new anymore.
Previous articles which resonated with HN were on Deluxe Paint and VisiCalc. The latest post, "HyperCard on the Macintosh," seems to be making the HN rounds currently. Bret Victor himself chimed in on the HyperCard article over on Mastodon, filling in some nice historical footnotes. https://posts.dynamic.land/@bret/115716576717006637
Unlike many (most?) other retrocomputing explorations, I specifically do not look at games nor do I tie myself to any particular machine, though I'm focused on the 1977 - 1995 period. I spend a minimum of two weeks with each productivity title, trying to learn it, building things with it, and generally trying to understand its approach to solving problems. I'd characterize my writing tone as casual, conversational, and decidedly light-hearted.
Each piece of software (so far, knock on wood) gets me thinking about some other aspect of related computing history, so I explore that as a tangent. With the Superbase article, I talked about "the paperless office." With the VisiCalc article I considered its impact on less obvious industries, notably hog farming.
I hope the passion and effort I put into the articles comes through. If you're interested in computing history beyond just the games I think you'll find something of interest on my blog. "This Week in Retro" did a segment about me and my various projects as well, if you're curious to get an overview of what I'm all about (link is queued up at the start of the segment) https://youtu.be/UHYscl1Ayqg?si=7JM1sZagjoqvPjk2&t=2137
The app reads the public data stream from exchanges, handles the nitty, gritty details of each exchange’s websocket connections, deals with its quirks, cleans up and normalizes the data into a uniform structure (currently only supporting spot trades) then exposes it downstream as an SSE stream.
Uses Go, Templ, and Mithril.js, and is open source
Link: https://metra.sh
Take a look at https://pickpedia.app
https://www.inclusivecolors.com/
There's 100s of color palette generation tools, where most only let you customize a single color then try to autogenerate tints/shades without much thought about accessibility or tints/shades customization. The main features of this tool are:
- Emphasis on accessibility. A live UI mockup using your palette warns you if your tints/shades are lacking contrast when used in practice for headings, paragraphs, borders, and buttons, and teaches you the WCAG rules. Fixing contrast issues and exploring accessible color options is also made much easier using an HSLuv color picker, where only the lightness slider alters the contrast checks, and not the hue/saturation sliders (most tools use HSL, where hue/saturation changes counterintuitively alter contrast checks which makes accessibility really tough!).
- You can tweak the hue/saturation/lightness of every tint/shade. This is useful because autogenerated colors are never quite right, and customization is really important for branding work when you have to include specific tints/shades. The curve-based hue/saturation/lightness editing UI also makes this a really quick process.
- Instead of just a handful of colors, this tool lets you create a full palette. For example, if your primary color is blue, you always end up needing other colors like green for success, red for danger, and gray for text, then 11 tints/shades for all of these, so you want a tool that lets you tweak, check, compare and manage them all at once.
It's mostly a demo on mobile so check it on desktop. I'm still working on making it easier to use as it probably requires some design background to understand, but really open to feedback!
- Updating my personal SSG to support Obsidian fully, which should simplify the publishing process a bit more. https://0xff.nu/hajime/
- Trying to find a new job, which is proving to be more difficult than it should be if you have certain standards about work/life balance.
- Writing an informative article about automating with/for ADHD which explains the motivation and solutions that I came up with for perhaps the weirdest, yet most annoying issues I face or forget about on a daily basis.
It uses LLMs to generate python code to scrap a webpage to fit any Pydantic model provided:
from hikugen import HikuExtractor
from pydantic import BaseModel
from typing import List
class Article(BaseModel):
title: str
author: str
published_date: str
content: str
class ArticlePage(BaseModel):
articles: List[Article]
extractor = HikuExtractor(api_key="your-openrouter-api-key")
result = extractor.extract(
url="https://example.com/articles",
schema=ArticlePage
)
for a in result.articles:
print(a.title, a.author)I also launched a web browser extension last week, Blog Quest, which has some great early adoption numbers that exceeded my expectations. When I can find some spare time I'll start fixing up some of the early feedback/feature requests.
https://feedbun.com - a browser extension that decodes food labels and recipes on any website for healthy eating, with science-backed research summaries and recommendations.
https://rizz.farm - a lead gen tool for Reddit that focuses on helping instead of selling, to build long-lasting organic traffic.
https://persumi.com - a blogging platform that turns articles into audio, and to showcase your different interests or "personas".
I'm inspired by the language Lobster's compiler that specialises functions to arguments of either reference type as a way of doing something analogous to using "escape analysis" to allow objects to be owned by the stack. I think that perhaps specialised functions could be re-merged, with compile-time checks replaced with very cheap runtime checks taking advantage of "upper byte ignore" bits in pointers.
The VM will also need to support not just managed source languages, but also languages where unique and borrowed references are statically checked and possibly stored in objects.
I'm building ourrhythm.de, a privacy first intimacy tracker spawned from a drunken thought: people buy those erotic advent calendars with 24 toys — do they actually keep up with all 24 rounds? It turned into a site idea.
There is also a way to search for articles using vectors, it's called "Semantic Search". So basically you can ask, for example, "Postgresql and how to best optimize it." and it would search for articles touching that subject, or at least related to it.
Wondering about the best way I can add a weekly newsletter built on top of the content currently being ingested, and still looking for more sources to add to the database (let me know if you have any good recommendations).
Android version is already shipped - https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.abishekmut...
Get notified for iOS and web version - https://memoryhammer.com/
I built a daily football (soccer) quiz a bit like Wordle but identifying 5 footballers by their career path.
Stating to get a quite a few people playing it each day now.
I suppose if it is ever to make any money it will need ads at some point but for now it is ad-free.
I’ve enjoyed making something simple and shipping it rather than trying to do something more grand.
The goal is simple: if you search for something specific, you shouldn’t have to scroll through ads, “inspired by your search”, or completely-irrelevant junk. You should just only see products that actually match exactly what you’re looking for.
Right now it searches across a few large stores and I’m iterating on the ranking and filtering. If you buy a lot of stuff online, I’d love feedback on where the results feel clearly better, and where they still fail compared to Amazon/etc.
Link: https://2zuz.com
I think it works best on Mac and iPad. Available on TestFlight and GitHub.
https://github.com/syousif94/EasyReader https://testflight.apple.com/join/1KvY5cwC
There were many detours and scenic routes taken for what turned out to be a pretty straightforward repair in the end, but that’s not uncommon for these kind of things.
I’m on my way back from Home Depot to buy some screws that were missing (and a Xmas tree.) Soon all that’s left will be writing a blog post.
I’m working on a way to personalize the content of your website to any visitor - with minimal setup (it’s just a script tag). We’ve just launched so if anyone wants to try it and reach out my email is in my profile!
The idea is to add dynamic content, i.e. reservation tool, to what is essentially a statically hosted web page.
Demo: https://astro-booking.pages.dev/booking/
A bit more details: https://www.nordstroem.ch/posts/2025-01-15-to-the-stars.html
Do you think your dynamic content could be comments?
Comments is just the text aspect. So it's already working!
The question here though: in a low-trust environment, i.e. the public internet, what do you do with API key for your GitHub Actions/CI pipeline. Can they be narrow enough to be considered public? Can you get rid of the Cloudflare Workers?
A 90-min workshop to introduce development Teams the full potential of AI coding agents.
Over the last few months I’ve been optimizing an AI-first SDLC for real engineering (not vibe code), getting amazing results on small Teams both in terms of delivery output and devex.
Some friends asked me to formally present and help their Teams, and enjoyed every moment of it.
There don't seem to be many automated tools out there that fit my need for this, so building out my own solution I have complete control over makes sense. It's a lot of fun to build this out exactly as I want to, rather than trying to configure a bunch of tools that I'm not familiar with and that don't meet my needs exactly.
The tooling I'm building up around this should hopefully make it easier for myself to get my playlists and track ratings off of Plex if I ever decide to abandon it for music listening.
What we do is quite simple 1. Verify the business is registered in the claimed jurisdiction. 2. Verify if individuals have the authority to act on behalf of that business. 3. Provide sharable credentials.
It's an AI-native email client. Launching soon!
My goal is to help people get done with email faster, so that they can get back to doing other stuff. A lot of the features are designed around this goal: unified inbox, AI summarization, AI email drafting, etc.
Some of these are table stakes but I think there's also an opportunity to significantly revamp how email is done in the AI age. Imagine having your own personal assistant that goes through your email and surfaces the highest priority things that you need to know automatically.
- a videogame. I've got a pretty killer idea in an open niche, but the indie market is so massively oversaturated that it feels impossible to get eyeballs.
- a next-generation post-RSS newsreader. But news is so depressing these days. I think most of the world wants to ostrich and I don't blame them.
- a reboot of Svpply, my own shuttered startup. I'd love to just make (another) thing that's about excellent clothes and shoes and artisanal pocketknives, but the way the economy is going, this feels grotesque. I was lucky to make it the first time when luxury goods were attainable _and_ normal people could pay for necessities; that window has closed.
It fetches new papers, scores them against a “research profile,” then produces concise summaries plus a short “why this matters” style rationale, and outputs an email/newsletter-like HTML digest. There’s also a small API for generating a digest, checking status, and previewing the render.
I built it because keyword alerts and generic newsletters were either too noisy or missed the stuff that was actually relevant to what I’m working on right now.
A web server for my blog: https://github.com/cozis/BlogTech
And a distributed file system for which I'm also building a cool little raspberry Pi cluster! https://github.com/cozis/ToastyFS
Fun stuff!
So, I'm building a toolkit that allows to keep things simple for the end user. Run Ollama and Open WebUI configured to work together: `harbor up ollama webui`. Don't like Ollama? Then `harbor up llamacpp webui`. There are 17 backends, 14 frontends and 50+ different satellite projects, config profiles that can be imported from a URL, tunnels, and a helper desktop app.
https://github.com/av/harbor?tab=readme-ov-file#what-can-har...
A lightweight and simple task management tool based on the Eisenhower Matrix
- scenes composed of SVG shapes, text, etc.
- web-worker rendering everything on the offscreen canvas;
- elements positioned via yoga-layout;
- optional JSX layer to define layouts, no support for React components inside the layout (yet);
- using Skia now, maybe Rive Renderer / Vello later? — I'd love to migrate to WebGPU eventually,
- first-class view transitions: no white screen, no jumps after the initial load, no things appearing/disappearing without a proper transition);
- fontkit to calculate everything re fonts and shape text — no more DOM-provided measurements;
- integration with Remotion to render videos.
Short-term goal is to reach MVP for slides/dataviz tool, and I'm getting close.
Trying to stay at maximum FPS while sacrificing loading time and, sometimes, the battery life.
I built a PWA that feeds you random, high-engagement Wikipedia topics (like the Great Emu War or the Demon Core) in a swipeable deck. Swipe right to save, swipe up to read "trivia snacks" instead of the full article. The idea was to have an antidote to doom scrolling.
The project started at a "vibe-coding-hackathon" and is now starting to become my main side project.
Curious for feedback :)
It's an infinite canvas for analytics teams, like Figma + data
I'm currently working on making a better landing page, it's really hard to make a good one!
I recently integrated Lazy Polars and running analytics in background processes so I can reliably provide a fast table viewing experience on dataframes that would normally exhaust memory of the jupyter kernel. Analytics are run column by column and results are written to cache, if a column fits into memory individually, summary stats for the entire dataframe can be computed.
Here's a demo video of scrolling through 19M rows, and running background summary stats.
it gives aggregate views like role and seniority breakdown, top languages and frameworks, companies represented, where stargazers are located, and an aggregate feed of blog posts from people who starred the repo.
link is here if useful: https://api.yolodex.ai/stargazers
aside from this, daily dingbat style puzzles partially llm generated at https://thingbat.today
It can work already as a "Generic" ActivityPub server and it can be made to work with Client-to-Server API, but given that there are not mature clients for that, I am now in the middle of an exercise where I am taking the existing server and implementing Lemmy's and Mastodon's APIs based on top of it. Once I can get any Lemmy and a Mastodon client working, I will then start changing their own SDKs, and then I can replace calls from their application-specific APIs with direct calls to Linked Data server.
[0] https://activitypub.mushroomlabs.comThe end result will be a binary (linux and mac for now) which you can run without NodeJS. Simple programs already work, and I have web apps very nearly running.
Web maps usually join together lots of small images called tiles (this is why you see square patches as google earth/map loads). They do this by querying a "tile server" API. It turns out this standard can also be leveraged to label and fine-tune models on map imagery. In my day job we built infra to efficiently serve imagery through tile servers for map visualization. So I wanted to test out ML applications of that infra.
I've been doing a lot of assembly, C, WASM and plan to top it off with a look at GPU instructions and PTX. I haven't learned as much as in the last two months in years, it's been great. And surprisingly everything has turned out to be much simpler and easier to implement than expected once demystified.
Now to be fair, AI has sometimes given me pointers when I didn't fully understand something. Using Gemini 3 for free has been nice in that regard. However I consciously try to only implement code myself and to actually make sure I learned something that sticks.
A purely functional and asynchronous effect system for F# which started as my thesis in university. It's inspired by ZIO and Cats Effect for Scala and has its own fiber system for scheduling functional effects.
I don't have much time to work on it now a days, but I try to keep up it as much as I can. I also don't have ambitions about getting a lot of users (if any), but I really enjoy working on it :)
building out a simpler way for users to report bugs and provide developers with a context-rich environment (console/network logs) that makes fixing bugs easier.
eagerly looking for beta testers, join our waitlist
I've figured out a better way to remove cycles that preserves the shape of the graph in a way that works well for our purpose. Now I just need to figure out how to minimise edge crossings and line up nodes in such a way that it's more immediately obvious how the data flows between different systems.
A open source Node.js lib that allows people to create and version control resumes using YAML.
Support LaTeX/PDF/Markdown outputs in one shot with professional typesetting. Support English/Chinese/Norwegian/French languages out of the box. With clang style, real time error reporting.
To release soon: HTML output.
I had some custom build scripts and sites for my dad and myself and was thinking I could make a simple SaaS out of it. Super early and didn’t advertise anywhere yet since the actual dashboard is very simple right now but it works and I keep adding the features I want to use myself.
Example dashboard: https://warnitz.weatherstage.com/
If you want to try it out, I suggest you write me at hello at domain and I will get you going. Let me know the type of weather station you have!
I’m still exploring new forms of AI-powered learning tools.
The latest thing I’ve been working on is an adaptive mode inspired by the LECTOR paper [1]. Where each lesson is a single learning concept with a mastery score tight to it based on your understanding of the said concept, so in principle the system can reintroduce concepts you didn’t fully grasp later on, ideally making separate flashcards unnecessary.
It can be self-hosted if any one want's to give it a try!
I know this is a personal project and you maybe didn't want to make it public, but I think the README.md would be better suited with a section about the actual product. I clicked on it wanting to learn more, but with no time to test it for now.
Also working on getting Nix setup on my devices, including a PR for the official installer to support OpenRC + BusyBox distros. Hopefully will get merged soon :)
Two main differences between this and other Anki-like apps: 1) The words you learn are from YT videos, websites and ebooks you import in the app. 2) The flashcards are optimized specifically for learning vocabulary - cards automatically get audio, images, multiple sentence examples, words definitions etc. It can also create fully monolingual flashcards with just definitions or the words in dialogs.
My biggest flex is that I have users who have done more swipes than me (over 100,000).
Source code and playground here: https://github.com/BarishNamazov/gsql/
Background blog here: https://barish.me/blog/parametric-polymorphism-for-sql/
Feedback is super appreciated!
But I'm also thinking about it as a product manager based on my tech experience. Looking at what people like in mugs, creating templates to exactly size the mugs to people's preferences, creating re-usable molds to put repeatable components together, and taking detailed notes on exactly what I am doing in-studio to create a repeatable, reliable process to create a product that will sell.
It is going poorly so far, but each iteration gets better, so hopefully I have everything down before I end up with 100+ unsellable mugs in my kitchen.
Think of it as TypeScript but with full algebraic types and other commodities from Rust:
This is something that started as a passion project - I wanted to see just how effective of a typing application I could make to help people improve typing speed quickly.
It’s very data driven and personalized. We analyze a lot of key weak points about a user’s typing and generate natural text (using LLMs) that target multiple key weak points at once.
Additionally we have a lot of typing modes.
- Code typing practice; we support 20+ programming languages - daily typing test - target practice; click on on any stat in the results and we generate natural text that uses a lot of that (bigrams, trigrams, words, fingers, etc).
sign up for the mailing list in footer of my site if that sounds of interest:
It can replicate a DB in as little as 9 seconds.
It's Open Core: Community Edition and Pro/Enterprise editions.
Still a WiP --> https://kopidev.com
While I'm talking about it, do the folks here have any suggestions where I should make it available? I want it to be a free educational resource for whoever might want it.
Working on a new puzzle for it as well as the mobile app, which is coming for iOS and Android around the holidays.
https://github.com/Leo4815162342/dukascopy-node - a node.js tool for downloading free market price tick data
https://football-logos.cc/ - a curated directory of all football (soccer) logos in high-definition
Started out as a kanban style of system where anyone could request that we re-order cleaning supplies at a Makerspace. Has evolved to tagging assets and maintaining those assets and I'm working on adding ESP32 based device control to enable/disable devices through those QR codes.
Someone asked for a free license in exchange of detailed private review and bug reports. They have reported more than 10 bugs so far. I'm working on some of them right now.
WithAudio is a one time payment text to speech reader app. It's one time payment because it has no server and no recurring cost! A nice side effect of this is it's 100% private.
This started as a funny cli project because I was sick of AWS and Terraform.
Hope to release a public beta next month.
for any more info can also hmu @tekbog on twitter/x
You can install it from here: https://extensions.gnome.org/extension/7538/todo-list
- Just finished forking an nvim keycast script for TUI demos: https://github.com/wong-justin/showkeys-noplug
- Started making a Roku app (https://wonger.dev/nuggets#n299)
- Drafting a year-in-review post for my website
- Drafting a book review for "Programmers at Work"
My own movie-rating platform, where you get your public dashboard at {username}.ratesmovies.net
https://llmparty.pixeletes.com
If you have to try one I recommend this
- A chatbot to control a car https://llmparty.pixeletes.com/experiments/universal_ui
A lot of teams enjoy using Linear for product management but still have to use Notion and Confluence for knowledge management. I’ve built Outcrop from the ground up to be fast with much more reliable search and realtime collaboration.
Hundreds of teams from startups and major companies have signed up for early access and many have made early commitments to support the development of Outcrop.
If your team would be interested, I’d like to hear from you!
imed at outcrop.app
Link: https://eternalvault.app
Another thing thats in early alpha right now is CapKit, AI professional captions for short form videos
But here's a TL;DR
- Files are end to end encrypted with a master key generated by you on your device during onboarding
- How do your family access the documents when only you have the key and it's E2EE? The idea is the key is splitted via Shamir Secret Sharing when you add a trusted contact, once the doomsday is triggered and they recieve the notification, only then they can use their "shares" to reconstruct the master key and open your vault and access the documents
Since I was researching DNS and global mobility, and wanted to share links with others, figured I'd just spin up a link site (though I'm still the only user).
One unique difference is I have a field for English Title, since I consume a lot of Korean & Japanese articles and want to share these, but don't want to have people translate the titles before they understand why they should read them.
Working on building an investment assistant backed by real time data. ChatGPT and Perplexity finance are amazing, but all of them are based on web search data only, which is a big limitation in finance since realtime data is important.
We have an agent that has access to almost every data point you can think of in the stock market (as much as we can get), which gets leveraged before answering.
And we also figured out ways to build amazing charts in between answer snippets, which looks very cool. Investors are usually very visual.
If you've ever tried to use Google Analytics (GA4) and Google Search Console (GSC) to figure out what's working with your marketing, and what to do next to grow, you have probably got frustrated at some point.
It acts as a Marketing Strategist. You can ask questions like "why is my SEO traffic down this week" and it will give you a clear answer based on your site's performance data, as well as a checklist to improve.
It's a full identity and authorization platform targeted for service-to-service use cases. But my focus the last couple months has been to make provisioning identity super easy, and I think I've done that (at least compared to something like SPIRE).
So if anybody has CI/CD pipelines, AI agents, edge-functions, or multi-cloud workloads they want to give auditable identity, I can help!
Imagine direct p2p payments that can be performed without reception.
I got thinking about what the equivalent of digital cash would be in 2021 and have worked on it on-and-off ever since. It has an optional NFC component.
Technically what I have is good enough to ship, but I’ve been unsure of the legal footing of such a project so it’s been on ice for a while now.
Its been a pain point for a lot of the clients I work with helping them understand and optimize their aws costs
They might get a surprise 1000 dollar bill and won’t be able to understand why it happened or what incurred that costs
To clean up unused space, you start an iterator at the root of the document and recursively write to a new buffer. This will clean up all the unused space. This operation can be delayed by the application for as long as they wish, until the size trade-off outweighs the cost of rebuilding.
It's a work in progress, but it's at a stage where if you ask nicely I'll let you know where to download it.
There are a lot of apps that can be built on ATProto, the PDS, etc. If you are exploring the same space I'd especially like to hear from you. I'm easy to find, which is the most useful thing about being named Zigurd.
https://bsky.app/profile/zeta0134.bsky.social/post/3m7xuxuc3...
Currently mostly happy with where this has ended up, but the percussion is a tad too basic and needs more work. One thing at a time I suppose. :)
Store your graphs in Parquet files on object storage or DuckDB files and query them using strongly typed Cypher. Advanced factorized join algorithms (details in a VLDB 2023 paper when it was called Kuzu).
Looking to serve externalized knowledge with small language models using this infra. Watch Andrej Karpathy's Cognitive Core podcasts more details.
I'm learning rust while I'm doing this too, so it's been an experience. Fun, though.
It’s mainly for personal use because converting, renaming, and packing mods in bulk can be very tedious. Especially if you're always changing your mod list (which is a given).
However, once I make it more user-friendly and add a proper GUI, I’ll likely release it to the public.
Live instance at https://busmap.tail5c8e3.ts.net/
Bonus data from a local RTL-SDR stack.
Similar to Claude skills, Simmer lets you run fleet wide code changes consistently across multiple git branches, isolated per environment.
Native custom web components that render different parts of themselves based on attribute changes.
Nice to see other people with the same idea! It’s so refreshing to build with.
Other folks can use it too.
The platform handles all what's necessary (and annoying to setup) out of the box: multiplayer, controls, mobile/responsive/ inventories, save/load, leaderboards, quests, dialogue, etc... Users just select what they want and configure it with clicks.
Technically, the engine just reads a config file and renders it for players. I've built all the foundation blocks that interpret the config.
I'll soon be onboarding game designers to stress-test the editor/engine. Still polishing templates so people have a good starting point, but it's functional and I'd love feedback!
- Try a quick game here: https://craftmygame.com/game/proj_1765327918743_cicdnsqgy/r/...
- if you want to signup and try to make a game with one of the template: https://craftmygame.com/
Thus far - uses way more tokens and noticing reduced steerability. The linting & fix loop seems much smoother though.
Then the counterfeit factories already have your chips and will simply include them in their product if you ever become successful.
"But there are many already!" I hear the crowd exclaim.
I respond, "Yes, but..."
It's really something I want for myself. Lightweight, as fast as humanly possible, extensible via plugins (in fact the entire app is mostly plugins, with a small core to glue it together), and a tiny bit of LLM (call it AI if you wish) integration to ask questions about the database or generate/review queries.
Repo should work with any github hosted changelog file. https://github.com/stevenmenke/claude-code-changelog-rss
Was hoping to have these ready for Christmas season, but life as always gets in the way!
The project has a CLI interface that is free and open-source, but you have to self-host the gallery. We are also building a SaaS app which is basically a managed version of the open-source tool with a visual builder and we take care of the hosting and CDN.
I wanted to try my hand at something else than software.
A small tool that does one thing: publish Markdown and give you a link—no accounts, no setup, no project scaffolding. Paste or write Markdown, click Publish, and you get a human-readable URL you can share immediately. You can update or delete the page later using the same link.
The idea came from frustration with how oddly hard it still is to put a Markdown document on the web without turning it into a repo, a static site, or a login-gated doc. JotBird is editor-light but publishing-first, and I’m now exploring CLI and editor integrations so it can act as a simple publishing layer for tools people already use.
The vast majority of tokens in a sequence will be irrelevant to an attention mechanism outside of a very small window. Right now however we tend to either keep all cache values forever, or dump them all once they hit a certain age.
My theory is that you can train model to look at the key vectors and from that information alone work out how long to keep a the token in the cache for. Results so far look promising and it’s easy to add after the fact without retraining the core model itself.
This looks like keyboard driven commands, secrets store (to be done) and scripts that you can write and store without spinning up a new server (easier chat ops)
Still in early alpha so after a few more polish it'll be ready, but you can try it right now!
https://iotdata.systems/jsonlviewerpro/
Next step is to integrate a visual data pipeline by using ImNodes. I‘m slowly making progress in my experiments, but C++ has a steep learning curve, especially when targeting MacOS and Windows at the same time.
Last winter I built a Matrix client for it. This time around I want to wrap Akonadi with a DBus shim and consume that model in custom calendar widgets and UX I’m making for a rotary knob ui.
I want to run the same app on an intel atom tablet on the side of my fridge, with a Griffin PowerMate hooked up to it for input.
I'm looking for people who have pain around slow analytics, avoiding migration from PostgreSQL, delaying pg upgrades or other big reasons to adopt something like this.
Ai-rganize — For using AI to sort files/folders on your local environment (Mac, Windows or Linux). (https://github.com/adefemi171/ai-rganize)
yaml2mcp — Got tired of writing MCP servers in JSON so I decided to build this as well. (https://github.com/adefemi171/yaml2mcp)
It's an app to learn Japanese language with AI. It has visual mnemonic images, JLPT progress tracker, Kanji info graphic, etc.
Later, I will add AI-comic creation based on Kanji characters you've selected.
I agree that over-gamified experiences are detrimental. That's why I try to build features that help people immerse themselves in the language.
what it does: you enter a name and it assembles an OSINT-style report on any Fb user. its early but it works great.
https://chromewebstore.google.com/detail/selection-copilot/b...
Right now I am tinkering with wails (https://github.com/wailsapp/wails) to build an app store.
[1]: https://apps.apple.com/de/app/days-of-life-milestones/id6738...
Super simple, yet it’s already good enough that I’ve had detailed conversations and debates in languages that I don’t speak at all.
This is what my company does (https://espresso.ai/), I'm taking advantage of the end of year quiet time to hack on some more R&D-style projects we have.
https://www.assetroom.net/diamond-or-dud
Would love feedback.
The patient is not a document - multimodal foundation models for biomedicine. JEPA's working well.
The main selling point of this app is that I do everything to let you continue do what you're doing while the algorithm search for other players. You receive a notification when a group is found or when a player is found.
Its not out yet ! The beta will be released in less than two weeks !
We have a website https://jynx.app/ If you want to leave feedback there is a form for that
https://github.com/0xekez/tinyLIRPA
tinygrad’s small set of operations and laziness made it easy to implement. Tho my overall sense is that neural network verification is currently more of a research interest than something practical.
I had had the idea and the domain registered for years and recently just took the leap to put it out there.
Developing Qt apps with C++ and QML is a blast - the fast performance of C++ and ease of use of writing UI in QML. But there is so much left to be desired with the built-in Qt Quick components - mobile issues like non native text handling, non native swipe-able stack view and much more. I’m aiming to bridge that gap.
I wanted something local and offline first + 10-20% better than excel, think I'm missing a few features other might find useful, but it works for my needs which has been great.
I’m still early and adding ideas as I go, but it’s already helped me questions I had.
Examples: - Coin flip simulation: https://www.blockviz.xyz/simulation/coin-flip - Sell & buy-back simulation: https://www.blockviz.xyz/simulation/sell-buy-back
Curious if others here run into similar “this felt right, but did it actually help?” questions.
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=app.radarlove....
Place discovery companion that de-noises your environment. Repeatable, one-stop-shop for information, personalized. Quick to decision. Updates live (best on mobile).
--
We are passionate travelers with 30k km under our wheels and we want consistent information across places we find ourselves at. Now are trying to figure out how to help others.
It helps to comprehend research papers (and not only papers - any document on any language) faster.
The tool is free to use, because we have credits from GCP. I guess at some point we'll need to introduce some level of subscription fee to keep it alive and useful, as it uses LLMs and vector search quite a bit.
Feedback is welcome!
Our first consumer product is Argo https://getargoai.com, but we're working on a B2B version as well.
We dug deep into what makes a conversation not just a nice chat but a deep, profound, top-notch interview, when the interviewer who neither pries nor forgets.
What makes people come to Joe Rogan or Lex Fridman and talk for 4 hours straight without feeling interrogated or experiencing conversation fatigue?
What if we had an app on our phone that helped us capture a story, filling the gap between two photos?
These are the questions we're excited about. Would love to hear what everyone thinks about conversational AI beyond the typical assistant paradigm.
We have an ML model that's trained on real reservations and use an LLM to decide why a user mightve opted out. We apply personas to this LLM to get a bit of a sense how they would probably be operating the booking flow.
It’s not a trading tool or product. More like a weekly, machine-assisted research project. Each cycle I run analyses on 120+ public companies across semiconductors, cloud, biotech, energy, robotics, quantum and crypto. The framing is inspired by Emad Mostaque’s “The Last Economy” thesis — the idea that when intelligence becomes cheap, the physics of value creation start to look very different. I originally built it for myself and retail investors in my family but I figure it could have more general utility so prettied it up a bit.
The system uses large-model reasoning (GPT-5+ though I've also tested Sonnet, Gemini and Grok) combined with structured scoring across technology maturity, risk, competitive positioning, and alignment to AI-era dynamics. The output is static HTML dashboards, PDFs, and CSVs that track month-over-month shifts. I'm adding to it weekly.
Mostly I’m trying to answer questions like:
* Which companies are structurally positioned for outsized upside in The Last Economy?
* How should I deliver the research so that it would have been actionable to someone like me 30 years ago?
* What signals would help folks identify “the next NVIDIA” 5 years earlier?
The inference costs real $$$ so I've set up a Patreon that, hopefully, will allow me to scale coverage and extend the modelling and methodology. There is a free tier and some recent, complete example output on the web site. I'm also happy to gift a free month for folks willing to provide constructive feedback: https://www.patreon.com/NextArcResearch/redeem/CC2A2 - in particular I'm looking for feedback on how to make the research more actionable without drifting into "financial advice".
I don't collect any data but Patreon does for authentication and Cloudflare does to deliver Pages. The Last Economy is here: https://ii.inc/web/the-last-economy
This month I'm continuing development on VT Code, my coding agent. I recently added Anthropic Agent Skills support and am really excited about it.
<meta property="og:image" content="http://localhost:3000/en/opengraph-image.png?1de9f909622c0a32"> <meta name="twitter:image" content="http://localhost:3000/en/opengraph-image.png?1de9f909622c0a32">
I love it.
Some of them are mesmerizing - https://ravaan.art/m/andr-masson-the-kill-78790-afb5d4af-a1d...
Not sure if I'm missing a better tool but trying to keep a good working mental model of this has been a nightmare for the operators I've maintained.
I am trying to offload as much of the complex stuff to existing parts of the kernel, like using systemd/cgroups for resource limiting and UNIX sockets for authentication.
[0]: https://github.com/middleware-labs/mw-injector [1]: https://github.com/open-telemetry/opentelemetry-injector
padel clubs availability aggregator
Not everybody has test money to play with. I'm in that group due to the crap economy left behind by previous politicians.
>> What prediction algorithm is it using?
As money is an issue, all I have at the moment is Google's AI Studio which is definitely not opensource, in my view. Though it is more forgiving than other vibe tools out there with their usage quotas. The market predictor has no capabilities to connect to any proprietary APIs as that requires money. That being said, it should be possible to modify the code so that it uses proprietary APIs should anyone want to do it. For now, I'm just adding stuff to it via VibeCoding that I think could be helpful. The main goal is to turn it into a research App that finds potential assets that will double to triple in the near feature or stocks that are prime for shorting, etc. I am also thinking of adding investment simulation capabilities but not quite sure how to go about at the moment. Turning some of its capabilities as a learning platform could be a good way to monetize the app. Not really a serious app at this moment, though, as I lack lots of tools to accomplish this.
Based on the code provided in services/geminiService.ts, here is the breakdown of the algorithms and sources used by the market prediction AI application:
Prediction Algorithm: The application does not use traditional quantitative statistical models (like ARIMA, LSTM, or Linear Regression) running on raw numerical data. Instead, it uses a Generative AI / Large Language Model (LLM) approach:
Model: The app utilizes Google's Gemini 2.5 Flash (gemini-2.5-flash).
Methodology: Context Gathering: The AI first performs a real-time Google Search (tools: [{ googleSearch: {} }]) to gather the latest text-based data, news, sentiment, and technical analysis summaries available on the web.
Semantic Analysis: The AI acts as a "Senior Financial Analyst" to interpret this unstructured data. It synthesizes a sentiment score (0-100) and predicts future price targets based on the qualitative data found (news catalysts, earnings, etc.).
Chart Generation: --The historical and forecast charts are generated mathematically within the code using Deterministic Linear Interpolation. --It connects the current price to the AI's predicted future price targets (1 week, 1 month, etc.).
--It adds algorithmic "noise" (randomness seeded by the asset name and date) to simulate market volatility visually, ensuring the chart looks realistic but stable for the specific day.
Data Sources: --The application relies entirely on Google Search Grounding. It does not connect to specific hardcoded financial APIs (like Bloomberg or Yahoo Finance API directly). Instead, it instructs the AI to search the public web for specific types of information.
Based on the prompts defined in your code, here are the sources and data points the app targets:
Real-Time Aggregators & Search Engine Results: --Live Google Search results for real-time price estimates. --Global financial news outlets (indexed by Google). --Market sentiment analysis from web summaries.
Regulatory & Official Documents: --SEC EDGAR Database: Specifically targeted in prompts for Stocks, Quantum, and Cannabis strategies to find filings.
Company Press Releases: --Used to identify fresh catalysts like contracts or product launches.
Technical Data: --Support and Resistance levels (retrieved from technical analysis articles found via search). --Relative Volume (RVOL) and Intraday Volatility data (for Day Trading strategy). --Chart patterns (Bull Flags, Pennants, Opening Range Breakouts).
Sector-Specific Sources: --Crypto Launchpads: Seedify, DAO Maker, Polkastarter (specifically for the "AI Presale" strategy).
Venture Capital Reports: --Data on VC investments and insider buying.
Industry News: Specific searches for Quantum Computing breakthroughs, Cannabis legalization news, and AI technology updates.
Market Dynamics: --Short interest data and borrow fees (for the "Short" strategy). --Analyst upgrades/downgrades and price targets. Macro-economic trend reports.
As I mentioned earlier, it actually found lots of legit assets with breakout potential but also finds crypto asset for that I suspect are scams but have a presence on the web.
Hope that provides a bit of context to your query.
Longer term personal aim is a self-hosting platform based on k8s with straight forward bootstrap, similar to Yunohost but k8s based.
The core features of this tunneling tool are stable. I am working on adding support for TCP as well as UDP traffic through the same tunnel.
Fun/Passion-Project: A small advent calendar featuring (weird) Acro-Yoga flows we collected throughout 2025. (Acro-Yoga is a partner sport combining acrobatics and therapeutics, you should try it, it's a really great sport!)
You can ask the model to rough out an AWS/GCP/Azure architecture, but the key part is the loop: you still have the normal editor, so you drag boxes, rename stuff, add your own bits, and then say things like “clean this up”, “split this service out”, “add a read replica here”. The AI edits the real draw.io XML, it’s not just generating a picture, so you and the model are basically sharing the same canvas.
It can also try to rebuild a diagram from a screenshot/PDF and then you keep iterating together in chat + manual edits.
Recently I added “bring your own API key” for a bunch of providers and support for uploading PDFs/text to turn existing docs into diagrams.
Repo (just crossed ~10.2k): https://github.com/DayuanJiang/next-ai-draw-io Demo: https://next-ai-drawio.jiang.jp/
If you live in drawio a lot, I’d be curious where this breaks down or feels more annoying than just doing it by hand.
Just made a landing page and then transfered its style to the app using Claude AI. Was so impressed that I paid for a supscription immediately.
Will polish the app and plan to launch next month.
I was fairly neutral about the tool for a while, but lately I've been going all-in on Claude Code, using things like rules and subagents.
It's also built to "rerender" the story, for instance rewriting it (slightly) for voice, translate it, or target different reading levels or background. I'm interested in translating stories for language learners in addition to simply translating into other native languages.
I'm also hoping to create some stories that stretch the medium. Perhaps CYOA (though I'm struggling with understanding what a CYOA is good at), though also other multi-perspective stories with reader autonomy in how to read through the story. LLMs make it easier to overproduce content, so you can give the reader flexibility without feeling regret that much of the content will be skipped, or rewrite passages for readers who jump into stories part way through.
Producing quality content is hard, and frankly kind of expensive, which is why I'm focused on finished products instead of interactive experiences. Though I do look forward to some future opportunity to take these rich characters that are grounded in full stories and find other things to do with them.
You can find more details at my site soon: https://ym2132.github.io
150+ tools for financial research in one place.
If you enter a ticker, you'll get a handy launchpad with deep links to top tools.
It is very stupid for now but I am working on the process and a friend of mine is working to improve the LLM (that's the project Babelfish).
Planning on wrapping up the year with a year in review post (thankfully I've been writing monthly updates as I go, should save some time).
Apart from that, clearing up tech debt that helped me ship fast, but was ultimately a bad fit for the business (Next.js and GraphQL).
I've kept running into the same problems in popular Go frameworks: hidden context mutation, magic middleware ordering, reflection-heavy binding, and APIs that slowly drift away from the standard library. The Gin ecosystem in particular has accumulated a lot of technical debt and footguns, which this post summarizes well: https://eblog.fly.dev/ginbad.html
Mizu is deliberately boring by design:
- Built directly on Go 1.22 http.ServeMux
- Explicit middleware chains with clear scoping
- No reflection, no codegen, no global state
- A real request context type that still interoperates with net/http
- First class graceful shutdown and error handling
If you're happy with net/http but want slightly better ergonomics and structure without losing control, that's the gap Mizu tries to fill.Mini canva alternative
Next years (and probably a couple years after) is an electro-mechanical smart watch. Sourced some Ronda GB22 gearbox motors and tritium tubes and planning on using a pcb for the face. What could go wrong.
Building an always-on recommender system for pilots and dispatchers at major airlines.
Oh man it's been fun.
Helps me with uni stuff. Some others find it useful as well
This is the first vibe coding platform to create personal apps that run entirely on chat starting in WhatsApp. We already have some beta customers building and it is really exciting to see what they are using it for:
-wine inventory tracker (lets you rate the wines that you drink and own) -outfit planner (has an inventory of all your clothes) -expenses tracker for trips w friends -personal training coach (keeps track of all the muscle groups that you have used with the purpose of eliminating muscle compensations)
We are quickly releasing beta access for people in the waitlist! Would love to have more people using it.
and also I am trying to find some time to improve the minimal month planner https://printcalendar.top/
It's very unstable at the moment but plan to have it fully implemented and working by the end of next month.
Using it to build a virtualized computational storage device for research.
I’m only a couple days in, and I’ve already learned so much about networks, containers, codecs, ffmpeg, and so on.
I expect it to make it possible to not think about when to reset back to a clean session. I also expect it to be more efficient as it will clear out all the "garbage context" that only serves to "confuse" the LLM, cost more tokens, make responses slower, etc.
Once I get a working prototype, then I will test the feature by using it while reimplementing it in other open source agents to get a feel for whether it has the effects I'm expecting.
Using an esp32, high speed ADC and 4 bass guitar pickups to detect and reverse engineer the club's path and face angle as it swings past the pickups.
Build to help you save and organize links without friction. Group related content into collections, pin critical resources for quick access, and search your entire knowledge base instantly.
thought it would be cool to build something like this. im still building but feel free to download it via testflight and give some feedback: https://testflight.apple.com/join/kM4udJSZ
Also planned to try out some io_uring based disk operation eventually, as an experiment to learn more of the underlying OS stuff.
A language learning web-app for serious students (and teachers). Simple ways to give interactive homework, practice reading and speaking, and also custom materials, for rare-ish languages
Opinionated workflows and automations for less technical teams where no code, low code or vibe code tools are beyond reach.
I see it as a "poor man's continual learning".
It feels like somewhere in the last decade we've all lost control over our email inboxes. While it would certainly be possible to filter and sort it, I've been wondering if it makes sense to just start with a system that is designed to intake a bunch of streams of information. Then it could be pointed at the raw information e.g event calendars and news-letters as well as streams like Facebook groups/Instagram where I don't want to actually go to those apps.
Speaking at a meta-level, this seems like what we should really be using LLMs for right now: use-cases where user controls what is done on their behalf.
I'm also sketching out a concept for a YouTube video explaining how retro game upscaling actually works on a technical level.
It plans multiple days ahead to make the best use of low prices and surplus solar.
It can use the vehicle api or the charger api to control charging.
Started this out by building a spreadsheet controlled by an LLM. Now putting a direct filesystem inside, simplified enough to have programmatic control of slide builders, spreadsheets, terminals and vibecoding applications
-> https://next.nocodefunctions.com
A complete refactor and stack change so that the web app can be more easily extended to new functions.
Currently it's mostly useful as an executive assistant, but I plan on making it useful on multiple fronts (e.g. social media, invoicing, etc).
Tagline: Turn your knowledge into interactive guides
Had the domain for 2 years, and finally putting it to use.
Attracting new monthly sponsors and people willing to buy me the occasional pizza with my crappy HTML skills.
Photo Prompt Generator which helps you to give LLM detailed prompts and get output as TOON, TONL, JSON or natural format.
Feedback welcome
- Added creating blog posts
- Improved moderation tools
- Rewrote an upstream client to move off deprecated API
- Lots of improvements around CSS/ui (many thanks to Gemini)
- Fixing lots of bugs
Basically LLM + Todoist MCP + some scheduling and clever prompts.
I built it as a hobby while I work on making microvm's way easier to use.
An interactive way of learning a new language.
It's a webapp that lets you create wish lists and share them with family and friends. The key feature is the claim system: when someone decides to buy you an item, they can claim it so others know it's taken, but you never see who claimed what or even that it was claimed at all. The surprise stays intact. You can also split big purchases. If someone wants a $400 stand mixer, multiple people can chip in allowing family tight on cash to feel like they're contributing without having family members feel like they have to put small items on their list just so everyone can contribute.
I kept it deliberately simple. No social features, no feeds, no ads. Just lists with items, links, prices, and notes. You create a list, share the link, and you're done. No group chat gymnastics required. It's free to use. I built this because I wanted it to exist, not because I had some grand monetization plan. You can sign up and create lists without a credit card.
Suggestions welcome!
I'm bootstrapping and covering LLM costs for Ward's first couple hundred users (got about 50 users at the moment) to improve it. We have a local mode for added privacy and are dipping our feet to gauge biz. interest (client-side phishing protection is unparalleled).
I've recommended it to friends, colleagues and loved ones. I dogfood my own product, and it even surprises me every day how much more mindful it makes me of my browsing of harmful content. Would love to get feedback and testers from HN.
On the Chrome Web Store -> https://tryward.app
TLDR the incremental compiler rewrite is finally bearing fruit. Namely, because we no longer have a batch compiler (i.e. we don't bail on the first error), we can
- provide LSP results (hover, goto def, etc) on non-broken parts of your isograph literals, even in the presence of errors
- surface those errors in VSCode, and
- fix those errors with auto-fixes!! (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6tNWbVOjpQw&t=314s) Which is to say, select a field that doesn't exist, and let the compiler create the isograph literal declaring it.
It's a great feeling to see this level of DevEx
While trying to figure out a good ICP and reach PMF
actually started as a new chat app but eventually I figured it could be used for LLMs
A citizen service initiative that aims to serve as a platform for monitoring areas of need in Puerto Rico.
My initial goal is to make a functional SillyTavern (AI roleplaying) replacement. SillyTavern builds prompts from a few rigid buckets (character, scenario, lore, system prompt, author's note...), which makes complex setups hard to manage. Content gets duplicated, settings have to be toggled in multiple places, and it’s easy to accidentally carry or modify state across conversations. Over time, it becomes difficult to tell what context is actually in effect.
I’m building an alternative that treats context as small, reusable pieces that can be composed and organized flexibly, rather than locked into fixed categories. Characters, settings, and behaviors can be mixed, reused, or temporarily enabled without duplication or manual cleanup, and edits preserve clear history instead of rewriting the past. The goal is to make managing complex context deliberate and controlled instead of fragile.
Although I’m trying to get the functionality required for roleplaying done first, the app is generic enough for other AI workflows where fine-grained, explicit context control is an improvement over existing chat interfaces. Think: start a new conversation with an assistant and start checking off rules, documents, and instructions to apply to the chat. Regenerate responses with clarifications or additional one-time context layers.
Working heavily right now on Customer Personas to use in validating/invalidating , which are configured with viewpoints, biases, and tendencies. Coming very soon will be Persona Journeys, in which you can get live, goal-oriented evaluation of your web app by a Persona.
Will be interesting to poke at over the holiday.
Killer feature is multiple plans per customer.
:)
Claude Opus 4.5 is used as a routing agent, which selects the most appropriate LLM provider and model tier to delegate a task to. For example, the routing agent might delegate a single large task to GPT-5, which in turn delegates multiple small tasks to Haiku agents in parallel, then Gemini reviews all the work.
Omnispect lets you view the delegation tree of prompts and responses that spawn from your initial prompt.
Eventually I'll open source it, but I'm a bit shy so I want to open source it once it's done without a commit history.
Find and Connect with the Right Journalists
To satisfy the urge of doing something else ambitious in the browser, I'm now doing the same thing for Tribes 2 maps: trying to make a web-based map viewer and editor: https://exogen.github.io/t2-mapper/ (editing/creation part still in progress)
I got this working for most maps pretty quickly. It translates the mission object tree from the Torque .mis files into a Three.js scene graph. Eventually though, I noticed that some mission definitions were more dynamic – Torque .mis files are really just TorqueScript .cs files with a different extension and some pragma/magic comments. So, to actually handle every map would require not just a mission file parser, but a whole TorqueScript runtime. Implementing THAT part seemed really tedious and, frankly, uninteresting to me. So I had Claude Code get a whole TorqueScript transpiler and runtime working. Now, when you load a mission, it actually runs all the same scripts that Tribes 2 runs to load the mission, all the way from server.cs and its `CreateServer()` function.
Currently, I'm continuing to get its rendering matching Tribes 2 as closely as possible, and setting things up so that live editing of missions will work.
TL;DR: CodinIT.dev is a local-first, open-source AI full-stack app builder that turns natural-language prompts into prototype → production web apps. It supports local/self-hosted workflows, connects to databases (Supabase), includes an integrated terminal and git automation, and plugs into 19+ AI providers so you can iterate fast. Download desktop app at https://codinit.dev .
A few quick facts
What it does: Generate full-stack code from prompts, preview instantly, and deploy anywhere — built for indie hackers who want full control of there code without vendor lock ins (open source).
Where the code lives: active repo and org on GitHub — org name is codinit-dev.
How to try it: download and run locally; the dev flow runs with pnpm run dev and serves locally from your machine.
Progress & current priorities
Stabilising the live code execution sandbox and improving safety/UX for file uploads and agent orchestration.
Tightening integrations with community LLM providers and adding more framework templates.
Improving contributor docs and reducing onboarding friction so people can run it locally without hurdles.
If you want to poke around, try the app or the GitHub org and open issues/PRs. I’ll hang around to answer technical questions here.
— Gerome (creator)
local open source alternative to: bolt/lovable/v0
If u are interested: https://matricsy.com :)
I got it to work already by setting up the global context in single-user mode (like postgres --single) and exposing bindings for SPI operations.
Yesterday night I got extensions working, but as this project builds as a static archive, the extensions also have to be part of the build. Both plpgsql and pgvector worked fine.
The bigger challenge is dealing with global state -- comparing the pre-start and post-shutdown state of the process memory, about 200 globals change state. Been slowly making progress to get restarts working
Give users easy access to trade insights.
3d printed.
www.june.kim/jamdojo
A local, cli based task and record manager, focused on simplicity and speed but includes support like managing schedules and records and searches etc to support it being a structured schedule helper.
Buying, researching and analyzing automotive data is broken. Trying to fix that bit by bit
esp32+sdcard reader+gc9a01 lcd and a pcm5102a+xh-a232 (overkill 30W! solution! Will replace in time)
Add some 3d printed enclosure and you are done. I am currently vibe coding a UI into it. I am planning to cram in adsp Bluetooth speaker support and some web config, maybe ota updates..
I know it's been tried before, but I thought I'd attack it with a few different angles - web based, no chrome extension, thresholds to help verify the article is worth it, extensive use of an aggregator to help with discovery and validation.
You can see the work in progress here: https://paperwall.io
very prototype-y so far, but I'll open source it when I have something worth sharing.
If anyone wants to join the project, contact me replying at this comment/writing at gbc0 [at] proton [dot] me
I was pondering doing something in regards to decentralised consummation of content. I am beginning to see how various websites are walling off their content and centralising everything whilst also monetising access to it for themselves and kicking content creators out, forcing them to run their own websites and use multiple backup platforms(mostly the dying youtube).
So I was thinking about flipping it on its head and instead of going to different websites to consume this content, like youtube, twitter and whatnot, people would have a single program to aggregate it instead. Then it occurred to me that this is what RSS/Atom was made for, kind of. So I am just letting the idea marinate for a bit and maybe next year I will look into it. Mastodon might have some good concepts in it that I want to look into and also come up with some standardised way for richer content that creators could provide beyond RSS to make it more palatable and easier consumable for users.
tl;dr not much this month :)
It's in a pretty early stage of development though, I haven't added my samples yet and nothing is to scale. It does run though which is neat https://github.com/thansen0/seabed-sim-chrono
Also because the web/blogs lost itself in tracking, bloat, paywalls... and I miss some of the quirkiness.
My blog runs on it: https://xenodium.com
This has been a fun project so far for me:
* First time using Claude Code. CC has made writing code fun again (I'm an experienced software developer, with - gasp - over 20 years of professional experience).
* On macOS, WhisperKit + Apple Intelligence (SpeechAnalyzer) is a powerful combination for offline transcription.
If you're interested in joining the beta, feel free to send me an email: diarmuid.glynn@gmail.com. The software is working now, but the documentation and website ( https://www.algomommy.com/ ) are unfinished, so I'd like to provide direct support to any interested beta users.
The idea is simple: You look at an image and describe what you see in your target language. That's basically it!
My reason for building it was that even though I can understand a lot of spoken spanish, I really struggle to construct sentences on the fly when speaking. Doing a few minutes of active learning like this each day really helps remap my brain a little, and I quickly run into situations where I hit a wall and realize I actually don't understand something as well as i had thought.
The app also gives a little feedback on what i have written from an llm, and it also provides clues that I have mapped to each image.
At the moment I am using it mainly for intermediate Spanish and beginner Irish, and personally I find it really helpful for both. Basically learning vocan for Irish, and more serious sentence structure etc. in Spanish.
I know a lot of people absolutely hate the idea of mixing LLMs with language learning, and I can kind of see why, but I personally find it really helpful in certain cases. If you are already doing classes, and consuming content in your target language I think something like this will be really helpful for a 5 minute coffee-break type activity in the morning. Its not a language course and I have not intention for it to be one. Its just a supplementary little tool that helps with getting your brain thinking in a new language and it is free to use.
Here are a few links if anyone thinks it might be interesting:
App Store: https://apps.apple.com/us/app/snapalabra/id6747401847
Play Store: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.whatever55....
Website: https://snapalabra.com
Purely for my own self-interest lol, so I don't win every time
Also, getting into the guts of how agents work and messing around with the knobs and levers is super interesting and where the real differentiating skills are
Built on ADK, CUE, and Dagger
https://github.com/hofstadter-io/hof/tree/_next/lib/agent
(my swiss army knife for dev work, getting a rename soon(tm))
2. Hof is already an established open source project, the goal is to interweave
3. Freedom to explore and design my own experience. Joining another project has never afforded this.
This is where the real AI bubble is. VC funded startups who's main plan is likely an acquisition. I'm not interested in those kinds of "open source" anymore, they want to lock you in to their product. Also, https://ssotax.org/
ADK is open source as I like it
I am learning hobby CNC having come from the 3D printer world and I found that the CNC software is considerably more complex than today's 3D printer software.
CNC seems to be the next hobbyist maker boom with the likes of Makera and Nestworks having very successful Kickstarters.
treating ai vibility more clssical market reasearch instaed of GA AI Edition
Also if anyone needs a contractor hmu at https://elephtandandrope.com
Also working on youtube vids to teach people to code for personal branding and another channel for POV driving vlogs but editing eats time :(
Just whatever time can allow really!
It’s part of a broader network of niches within the agricultural, heavy equipment and transportation sectors.
It has around 10M pages and pretty decent traffic.
• I open-sourced and released some iOS dev tooling I built for Claude Code that multiplied my personal coding productivity: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46264591 Nobody cares yet, but it makes me feel good to share something cool.
It’s for people who feel smart but overwhelmed, drowning in tabs, skimming everything, remembering nothing.
You don’t need more information. You need clarity.
On a personal note, I’ve been trying to lean into my fears more. Disassembling binary was always something I knew would be helpful to know but I kind of avoided, so I think this is helps with that a little.
While I was working on the tablet interface (in Godot Engine) I put Claude to work on what after two minutes became a full product on its own with a new file format as well. Tell me what you think! (so far the response is meh...)
I start with SHM memory, will add linux dma-buf once SHM is enough up and running. Currenty monothreaded, ofc. AMD GPU code for SHM is in, now writting wayland protocol code to please the first wayland clients I would like to run (not using the C libraries provided by the wayland project, native wire format).
I want to move away from x11, and once I get something decent with this compositor, I will probably have to fork xwayland in order to make it work with this minimal compositor, that for some level of legacy compatibility (steam client/some games).
In the end, I did design some kind of methodology and coded some SDK tools in order to write a bit more comfortably RISC-V machine code programs in a very simple fire format (only core ISA, not even compressed instructions, no pseudo instructions, using only a simple C preprocessor).
Coding time does not matter on such software in the light of their life cycle once it does "happen".
All that presuming not too much IRL interference... yeah, I know this is excessive to expect that...
The super hard part is not coding, it is motivation: energy, mood, cognitive bias, etc.
open source and hosted!
Also, assembling the PCB for some custom 1U rack hardware. Added a pi5 header to the debug PCB for automated component testing.
Restructuring fabrication options for several hardware components due to trade issues. =3
"So long and Thanks for all the Fish" ( Douglas Adams )
We are building a K8s management platform based on AI Agents and smart visualization. It's surprisingly hard to distill common issues down to generalizable agents which can solve real world issues but we've made some very exciting progress in the space.
The trick (one trick) is to allow LLMs to provide an audit/accounting/compliance playbook, along with customizations, based on the user describing their business model.
I'm putting the finishing touches on an AI parser that I hope to ship after the new year. I'm getting very consistent results from Ministral-3b model, which is super light weight.
Just submitted it to Apple for review this past weekend... basically Scapple's visual text canvas meets Workflowy's hierarchical focusing. I mainly wrote the app for myself to organize my thoughts. Very happy with how it has turned out.
Edit: Would be interested to hear why this was downvoted?
https://timbran.org/moor.html https://codeberg.org/timbran/moor
along with the prototype brand new ultramodern MOO "core" (starter DB) "mooR cowbell"built on top of it https://codeberg.org/timbran/cowbell, with example/demo at https://moo.timbran.org/
It was a mud style game in beta that ended up getting axed in the early 2000s (?) but it was brilliant and a few of us stuck around in it long after we should have.
If anyone has heard anything about it, let me know!
About all I can find publicly so far https://x.com/hellcowkeith/status/885362337384878080
In the time-honored hacker tradition of added more problems to the problem i'm trying to solve I'm learning a new language (never done FP before, either), building the product I wanted, using the latest crop of creative tools, and treating it as a little end-to-end business startup too. Launching in January!
Check the fireproof video, it's quite fun haha https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v0NXXfCA2CY
Vine but for user-submitted microgames
Note: You don't need to install anything...This tech is awesome bro!
We're focusing on "anti-cloaking" for anti-phishing and other Internet security applications at the moment. Phishing sites can "cloak" themselves so that they present malicious content to ordinary users and benign content to bots, and thereby evade detection. Anti-cloaking is doing things to defeat cloaking.
The methodology is to operate a site that logs all requests, and collects information from the JavaScript environment, and looks for signals that a session is being operated by a bot instead of a human. We have 183 unique signals so far.
We've seen fake mobile phone APIs being injected into the DOM, and have been able to read out the source code implementing them. We've seen lots of people running the browser with TLS validation and same-origin policy disabled, which are both easy to probe for. And we've even seen people running services on localhost with CORS headers that allow cross-origin requests, allowing us to read out their server headers and page contents and which would allow us to send arbitrary requests to their local servers. We've seen people using proxies that don't support websockets. We've even seen surprisingly-big companies scanning us from netblocks that just straightforwardly name the company, which would be trivial to block just by IP address.
It turns out that every security vendor that scans VirusTotal submissions or domains from CT logs has major flaws in their headless browser setup which mean it's worryingly easy to cloak from them.
I don't know the best angle for monetisation. Currently we are selling "quick overviews" of what people are doing wrong, but it kind of feels like we're giving away too much value too cheaply. However it's difficult to convince people that there is value worth paying for without telling them what they're doing wrong upfront before they pay. Ideas include:
* automated quick overviews, where we give you a URL to point your bot at, find out all the signals you hit, and give you an automatically-generated report of what you are doing wrong
* or a manual "pentest" of your headless browser, where we do the same thing but spend a few days manually looking harder to see if there are new signals we're not yet spotting automatically
* or we could sell a report of the state of the industry as a whole
* or access to our tooling
* or something else
I have been told that if I say it's for anti-phishing then I have 12 customers max but if I say it's for AI browser agents then someone will give me a billion dollars. So possibly we need to explore other applications, like either telling AI scrapers why they are getting blocked, or else helping sites block AI scrapers (though I am personally opposed to building the apartheid web).
Open problems are:
* what's the best form to sell it?
* how do we satisfy people that if they pay for a test then they will get value from it?
* should we pivot away from anti-phishing?
* for bots that we notice have found us from VirusTotal or CT logs, how do we work out who is operating them so that we can sell to them? Sometimes attribution is easy but in the majority of cases it is not
If I make a really good AI coding platform which saves people hours compared to existing platforms and provides more security. The chance of success is 0 because it's competing with incumbents.
If I make an app which allows cats to order food and back massages from their owners, this has a high chance of success.
I'm using COPE from Zentropi to run my moderation https://zentropi.ai/ .
Just finished a major (v0.10) revamp of the API (you can use connet as part of an application, not through the CLI) which also fixed a few issues I've been seeing before.
Now, I'm gearing to update the relay protocols - currently relays are closed off by the control server (e.g. you ask it to provision you a relay resource) which requires the relay to communicate with the control server itself. In the new version, the relays will be operating on their own (there might be a shared secret with the control server, in case you want a closed off relay) and peers will reserve directly with the desired relays. Maybe in future, the relays might form clusters on their own to take advantage of better relay-to-relay network and peers will reserve only at the relay closest to them.
Another stream of work, is giving peers identities. Right now the server will give them an internal identity to better support reconnects, but these are not stable (e.g. they don't survive client restarts). In future, the peer will advertise their identity and then other peers may choose what peers to allow comms with and what to ignore, pushing more decisions into peers themself.
Yet another change I'm thinking about is exposing raw endpoints to enable users of the system to implements other protocols - I'm not quite sure if this is really needed (the destination/source, e.g. server/client) covers a lot of ground by itself, but it would be great if these are not the only options.
Many options how to continue, but if I'm out of ideas, there is always a Rust rewrite to throw in /s
Another option is to try to rewrite clients in each of the language, but most fare poorly on QUIC support - in Java for example, I'm not aware of one that is advertised as production ready (looking at kwik with their fork of TLS).