Show HN: Get a Restaurant Reservation with a Single Text Message
1 by reggylong | 0 comments on Hacker News.
Wednesday, 31 July 2019
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Show HN: Arc – a declarative data transformation framework
3 by seddonm1 | 1 comments on Hacker News.
3 by seddonm1 | 1 comments on Hacker News.
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Launch HN: Hatchways (YC S19) – Internships Instead of Interviews
5 by jaclynmling | 0 comments on Hacker News.
Hi HN, My name is Jaclyn Ling and I'm the founder/CEO of Hatchways ( https://hatchways.io ). We make it easier to get your first job. More specifically, we help talented engineers who may not shine in traditional recruitment processes (resume + multiple interview processes) get opportunities to prove themselves on the job. We do this by using a practical skill-based assessment as a proxy for the resume, and then matching them to startups for paid internships, as a way to reduce full-time interview processes. As a new grad without relevant work experience, or as a career shifter without a relevant degree, getting a first job is very painful. You spend months preparing for interviews that don’t reflect the job, you send hundreds of resumes out that go unanswered, and when you actually get interviews, getting through five rounds successfully is like a lottery. I’ve been interested in this problem for a long time because of my own early struggles trying to get a job. I graduated from a foreign university (Canada), had a subpar GPA, and I don’t perform well in high-pressured style interviews. Somehow, I networked my way into getting interviews at all my “dream” companies. But I got rejected at every one of them and to this day, I’ve never gotten a job I’ve interviewed for. It deeply affected my confidence. However, since then I was fortunate enough to start and exit a startup. We built a fashion app that made personal outfit recommendations based on your likes, which eventually evolved into a chatbot that provided recommendations to hundreds of thousands of teens. We got acquired, and when I was working for the company that acquired us, I finally realized that the interviews I'd failed at hadn’t reflected my ability to do well on the job. Mainstream hiring processes are biased towards those who went to great schools, had high GPAs, are native-English speaking, have worked at brand name companies, are extroverts and great networkers, etc. But there are so many talented people who don't fit that profile. We're excited to work on ways of hiring that give them a better chance. Our practical skill-based assessments simulate tasks they’d actually be doing on the job (e.g. project-based work). Engineers on our end review the job seeker’s code to pick up signals that are important for on-the-job such as: ability to follow a spec, code quality and how quickly the task is completed. An employer pays 90% of the cost only when a full-time hire is made, so ensuring that candidates have job-ready skills is crucial for us. We've found that it works to give people the opportunity to prove themselves on the job: 80% of our internships have resulted in full-time employment immediately after. So far, we have helped talented engineers get software jobs who would have otherwise been overlooked: baristas and Uber drivers turned engineers, candidates with no local experience (from Turkey, India, Russia, Ethiopia, Brazil etc.), and those with non-CS degrees (linguistics, philosophy, economics, MBA’s, dentistry, mechanical engineering etc.) I’d love to hear your thoughts and ideas about how we can improve this system and how we can best help talented people who shine once they get a chance to prove themselves. We would love to hear your personal experiences in this space too. Thank you!
5 by jaclynmling | 0 comments on Hacker News.
Hi HN, My name is Jaclyn Ling and I'm the founder/CEO of Hatchways ( https://hatchways.io ). We make it easier to get your first job. More specifically, we help talented engineers who may not shine in traditional recruitment processes (resume + multiple interview processes) get opportunities to prove themselves on the job. We do this by using a practical skill-based assessment as a proxy for the resume, and then matching them to startups for paid internships, as a way to reduce full-time interview processes. As a new grad without relevant work experience, or as a career shifter without a relevant degree, getting a first job is very painful. You spend months preparing for interviews that don’t reflect the job, you send hundreds of resumes out that go unanswered, and when you actually get interviews, getting through five rounds successfully is like a lottery. I’ve been interested in this problem for a long time because of my own early struggles trying to get a job. I graduated from a foreign university (Canada), had a subpar GPA, and I don’t perform well in high-pressured style interviews. Somehow, I networked my way into getting interviews at all my “dream” companies. But I got rejected at every one of them and to this day, I’ve never gotten a job I’ve interviewed for. It deeply affected my confidence. However, since then I was fortunate enough to start and exit a startup. We built a fashion app that made personal outfit recommendations based on your likes, which eventually evolved into a chatbot that provided recommendations to hundreds of thousands of teens. We got acquired, and when I was working for the company that acquired us, I finally realized that the interviews I'd failed at hadn’t reflected my ability to do well on the job. Mainstream hiring processes are biased towards those who went to great schools, had high GPAs, are native-English speaking, have worked at brand name companies, are extroverts and great networkers, etc. But there are so many talented people who don't fit that profile. We're excited to work on ways of hiring that give them a better chance. Our practical skill-based assessments simulate tasks they’d actually be doing on the job (e.g. project-based work). Engineers on our end review the job seeker’s code to pick up signals that are important for on-the-job such as: ability to follow a spec, code quality and how quickly the task is completed. An employer pays 90% of the cost only when a full-time hire is made, so ensuring that candidates have job-ready skills is crucial for us. We've found that it works to give people the opportunity to prove themselves on the job: 80% of our internships have resulted in full-time employment immediately after. So far, we have helped talented engineers get software jobs who would have otherwise been overlooked: baristas and Uber drivers turned engineers, candidates with no local experience (from Turkey, India, Russia, Ethiopia, Brazil etc.), and those with non-CS degrees (linguistics, philosophy, economics, MBA’s, dentistry, mechanical engineering etc.) I’d love to hear your thoughts and ideas about how we can improve this system and how we can best help talented people who shine once they get a chance to prove themselves. We would love to hear your personal experiences in this space too. Thank you!
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Show HN: Make a lowlatency, realtime multiplayer game with edge computing
4 by ctesh | 0 comments on Hacker News.
4 by ctesh | 0 comments on Hacker News.
Tuesday, 30 July 2019
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Show HN: Quickly generate an invoice PDF for a single product/service
4 by adamschwartz | 0 comments on Hacker News.
4 by adamschwartz | 0 comments on Hacker News.
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Launch HN: FeaturePeek (YC S19) – Front-end review for the whole team
4 by andrethegiant | 0 comments on Hacker News.
Hi HN! I'm Jason, one of the co-founders of FeaturePeek (https://featurepeek.com). FeaturePeek lets front-end developers get UI/UX feedback from their team earlier in the release cycle. For every pull request, we spin up a dedicated feature environment with tools like commenting, screenshotting, and bug filing overlaid on top. Our vision is to fill the void in product development that occurs after developer handoff. Great tools exist for design prototyping (Sketch), design feedback (InVision), developer handoff (Zeplin)... but then there's a cliff, an empty gap, where teams use ad-hoc methods of iteration before shipping. We want to build a tool that shortens feedback loops between cross-functional teams so that the end of the release cycle is sane and stress-free. If you're familiar with automatic feature environments for pull requests — like what Heroku or Netlify offer — it's like that, but 1) we're platform agnostic, 2) we support Dockerized builds in addition to pure static assets, and 3) we overlay a suite of tools on top of each environment to help your team communicate more effectively. My co-founder Eric and I wished that this existed at our last startup. While developing a web-based SaaS product, we found that our teammates would wait until the day before the release to leave implementation feedback on new features. The feedback ranged anywhere from CSS nits to the dreadful "This isn't what I meant", in which case we had to decide whether to scramble together a fix or to delay the release. It was tempting to fault the procrastinating reviewers, but it happened so often that we realized it was instead a flaw in the review process. We knew there had to be a better way. Eric has led Build & Integration teams at Apple and has experience in release management. My background is in front-end engineering and developer experience. So it was natural for us to think in terms of developer tools for release processes, and we decided to work on this together. There are a few products that exist for gathering website feedback and filing bugs, but they all rely on using a browser extension in a dev/staging environment. This method is inferior because 1) Getting everyone on your team to install a browser extension on every browser is a pain; 2) Code has already been reviewed and merged, which is way too late to start the feedback process. Waiting on code review before conducting feature review is an unnecessary speed bump; and 3) Dev/staging environments can be an integration war zone, especially for larger teams. Another developer's feature could break something in yours, so this environment is not suitable for conducting feature review. QA should still happen on the release as a whole, but the UI/UX review of individual features should occur in isolation. Here's how it works: After your pull request builds in CI, call our one-liner to ping our services. We use the credentials present in your CI environment to pull your image from your container registry. If you build static content, we download your built assets and add them to an nginx image for you. When the environment is up, a deployment link posts in the pull request, and your team is notified via Slack. We use Kubernetes and Helm to manage and namespace each environment, which spin up and shut down based on VCS webhooks. Our team collaboration features sit on top of your app in a parent frame, so you don't need to install any run-time dependencies to take advantage of them. All new teams get a two-week free trial — but you can use the coupon code HN2019 to get an additional 50% off your first three months. We'd love to hear your feedback, and answer any questions you may have :-)
4 by andrethegiant | 0 comments on Hacker News.
Hi HN! I'm Jason, one of the co-founders of FeaturePeek (https://featurepeek.com). FeaturePeek lets front-end developers get UI/UX feedback from their team earlier in the release cycle. For every pull request, we spin up a dedicated feature environment with tools like commenting, screenshotting, and bug filing overlaid on top. Our vision is to fill the void in product development that occurs after developer handoff. Great tools exist for design prototyping (Sketch), design feedback (InVision), developer handoff (Zeplin)... but then there's a cliff, an empty gap, where teams use ad-hoc methods of iteration before shipping. We want to build a tool that shortens feedback loops between cross-functional teams so that the end of the release cycle is sane and stress-free. If you're familiar with automatic feature environments for pull requests — like what Heroku or Netlify offer — it's like that, but 1) we're platform agnostic, 2) we support Dockerized builds in addition to pure static assets, and 3) we overlay a suite of tools on top of each environment to help your team communicate more effectively. My co-founder Eric and I wished that this existed at our last startup. While developing a web-based SaaS product, we found that our teammates would wait until the day before the release to leave implementation feedback on new features. The feedback ranged anywhere from CSS nits to the dreadful "This isn't what I meant", in which case we had to decide whether to scramble together a fix or to delay the release. It was tempting to fault the procrastinating reviewers, but it happened so often that we realized it was instead a flaw in the review process. We knew there had to be a better way. Eric has led Build & Integration teams at Apple and has experience in release management. My background is in front-end engineering and developer experience. So it was natural for us to think in terms of developer tools for release processes, and we decided to work on this together. There are a few products that exist for gathering website feedback and filing bugs, but they all rely on using a browser extension in a dev/staging environment. This method is inferior because 1) Getting everyone on your team to install a browser extension on every browser is a pain; 2) Code has already been reviewed and merged, which is way too late to start the feedback process. Waiting on code review before conducting feature review is an unnecessary speed bump; and 3) Dev/staging environments can be an integration war zone, especially for larger teams. Another developer's feature could break something in yours, so this environment is not suitable for conducting feature review. QA should still happen on the release as a whole, but the UI/UX review of individual features should occur in isolation. Here's how it works: After your pull request builds in CI, call our one-liner to ping our services. We use the credentials present in your CI environment to pull your image from your container registry. If you build static content, we download your built assets and add them to an nginx image for you. When the environment is up, a deployment link posts in the pull request, and your team is notified via Slack. We use Kubernetes and Helm to manage and namespace each environment, which spin up and shut down based on VCS webhooks. Our team collaboration features sit on top of your app in a parent frame, so you don't need to install any run-time dependencies to take advantage of them. All new teams get a two-week free trial — but you can use the coupon code HN2019 to get an additional 50% off your first three months. We'd love to hear your feedback, and answer any questions you may have :-)
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Show HN: EmailRep, free API to query email reputation and report bad senders
3 by ianthiel | 1 comments on Hacker News.
3 by ianthiel | 1 comments on Hacker News.
Monday, 29 July 2019
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Show HN: Lagukan, a highly personalized music service
14 by jacobobryant | 1 comments on Hacker News.
14 by jacobobryant | 1 comments on Hacker News.
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Show HN: GIF-progress Attach progress bar to animated GIF
2 by guessmyname | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by guessmyname | 0 comments on Hacker News.
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Show HN: Maps autocomplete for business names and addresses in US
2 by NetToolKit | 1 comments on Hacker News.
2 by NetToolKit | 1 comments on Hacker News.
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Show HN: Stackkup – Don't let tabs slow the browser down
2 by blader_johny | 1 comments on Hacker News.
2 by blader_johny | 1 comments on Hacker News.
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Show HN: Cloudboost.io – open-source BaaS platform just like Firebase
2 by valeria_m23 | 1 comments on Hacker News.
2 by valeria_m23 | 1 comments on Hacker News.
Sunday, 28 July 2019
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Show HN: sqlmon – Monitor SQL Server using Elasticsearch and Kibana
2 by soheilpro | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by soheilpro | 0 comments on Hacker News.
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Show HN: I Built a Spreadsheet of Productized Services
4 by vinrob92 | 2 comments on Hacker News.
Hey HN, This weekend I built an excel spreadsheet so that you can come up with your next (scalable) service idea. If you are a consultant / agency and are looking to move from to build a scalable business / valuable asset, this is for you! WHY I built this: - Many people want to start their business but can't find an idea - Many people build stuff / services that nobody want - Ideas are great but execution is what matters: See what others have done successfully, get inspired, and do your own thing! The framework is called the Productized Service Matrix. --- It features in total: - 75 companies (making as low as a few thousand USD $/month to $50m/year) - 21 verticals/industries - 13 different business models The list is here: https://ift.tt/2YoNGLV I also run a productized service (see in my profile) and have been really interested in this space for the last months.
4 by vinrob92 | 2 comments on Hacker News.
Hey HN, This weekend I built an excel spreadsheet so that you can come up with your next (scalable) service idea. If you are a consultant / agency and are looking to move from to build a scalable business / valuable asset, this is for you! WHY I built this: - Many people want to start their business but can't find an idea - Many people build stuff / services that nobody want - Ideas are great but execution is what matters: See what others have done successfully, get inspired, and do your own thing! The framework is called the Productized Service Matrix. --- It features in total: - 75 companies (making as low as a few thousand USD $/month to $50m/year) - 21 verticals/industries - 13 different business models The list is here: https://ift.tt/2YoNGLV I also run a productized service (see in my profile) and have been really interested in this space for the last months.
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Show HN: robots.txt as a service, check web crawl rules through an API
2 by fooock | 1 comments on Hacker News.
2 by fooock | 1 comments on Hacker News.
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Show HN: Generate seeded Hashids that is unique per scope
1 by licitdev | 0 comments on Hacker News.
1 by licitdev | 0 comments on Hacker News.
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Show HN: Comntr captchas – a stateless service to stop spammers
3 by comntr | 3 comments on Hacker News.
3 by comntr | 3 comments on Hacker News.
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Show HN: TLDR This – Auto summarize any article or webpage in a click
2 by radhakrsna | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by radhakrsna | 0 comments on Hacker News.
Saturday, 27 July 2019
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Show HN: Cookiebro WebExtension can now blacklist single cookies by name
3 by calmchaos | 0 comments on Hacker News.
3 by calmchaos | 0 comments on Hacker News.
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Show HN: Penme – A Lightweight Open-Source Note Taking App Focused on Privacy
2 by bauripalash | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by bauripalash | 0 comments on Hacker News.
Friday, 26 July 2019
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Show HN: Library for a Travel Service to Optimize Time During Trip to a City
2 by igushev | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by igushev | 0 comments on Hacker News.
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Show HN: Chrome ext swaps 'polls' w/ 'chats with old white ppl with landlines'
2 by thisrunson | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by thisrunson | 0 comments on Hacker News.
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Show HN: An open-source PDF document generation library in java
2 by openlowcode | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by openlowcode | 0 comments on Hacker News.
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Show HN: Quepid workbench for tuning Solr and Elasticsearch relevance
3 by softwaredoug | 1 comments on Hacker News.
3 by softwaredoug | 1 comments on Hacker News.
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Show HN: Playlistor – Convert Apple Music Playlists to Spotify
2 by badmon | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by badmon | 0 comments on Hacker News.
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Show HN: I built a spreadsheet app with Python to make data science easier
2 by ricklamers | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by ricklamers | 0 comments on Hacker News.
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Show HN: Sauron-native – a truly native, truly cross platform GUI for rust
2 by ivanceras | 1 comments on Hacker News.
2 by ivanceras | 1 comments on Hacker News.
Thursday, 25 July 2019
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Show HN: Open-source community for software testing data
2 by nickfrost | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by nickfrost | 0 comments on Hacker News.
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Show HN: Play rock paper and scissors against a untrained neural network
2 by atum47 | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by atum47 | 0 comments on Hacker News.
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Show HN: Ethereum Time Travel, trade 2 years in 2 minutes
2 by patricklorio | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by patricklorio | 0 comments on Hacker News.
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Show HN: Revive – find negative trends in your Google Analytics
3 by smalter | 0 comments on Hacker News.
3 by smalter | 0 comments on Hacker News.
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Show HN: Street Lanes Finder – Detecting Street Lanes for Self-Driving Cars
2 by gsurma | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by gsurma | 0 comments on Hacker News.
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Show HN: "Network diff” detects new scripts or data exfiltration on websites
3 by bluepeter | 0 comments on Hacker News.
3 by bluepeter | 0 comments on Hacker News.
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Command line forensics tool for tracking USB device artifacts on GNU/Linux
17 by snovvcrash | 5 comments on Hacker News.
17 by snovvcrash | 5 comments on Hacker News.
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Show HN: Fyipe – Status Page, PagerDuty, Pingdom All in One
2 by valeria_m23 | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by valeria_m23 | 0 comments on Hacker News.
Wednesday, 24 July 2019
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Show HN: Bunker.land – The Best (and Worst) Places to Wait Out a Nuclear War
4 by bpodgursky | 3 comments on Hacker News.
4 by bpodgursky | 3 comments on Hacker News.
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Show HN: react-mosaic v3 – React tiling window manager – now with touch support
3 by nomcopter | 0 comments on Hacker News.
3 by nomcopter | 0 comments on Hacker News.
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Show HN: Eigensheep – Run Jupyter Cells on AWS Lambda
2 by antimatter15 | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by antimatter15 | 0 comments on Hacker News.
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Launch HN: Simmer (YC W19) – Reviews for Delivery Dishes
1 by vaibhavverma9 | 0 comments on Hacker News.
Hi HackerNews community! We’re Vaibhav and Richard, founders of Simmer ( https://usesimmer.com ). Simmer aggregates dishes from DoorDash, Caviar, GrubHub, and basically every other delivery platform out there, and tells users the best dishes across the board. We do this by providing dish-level reviews. Users find highly reviewed dishes on Simmer, choose the delivery platform of their liking, and we deep link them into their chosen delivery app. We essentially lead gen to delivery. We started working on Simmer because we loved trying new restaurants, but never knew what to order. Especially, when there’s a 5 page menu. We always asked ourselves, “Why aren’t there ratings for individual dishes?” We launched our app with this restaurant-centric use case (reviews for every dish at every restaurant), but when we rolled out delivery integrations, we realized that users resonated most with the delivery angle. They found it particularly difficult to find great dishes on delivery (after all, there are no waiters to give you recommendations). As a result, we have doubled down on becoming an aggregator of delivery dishes across platforms. So far, the app features hundreds of restaurants (and even more dishes) that deliver in New York, Chicago, and San Francisco. We’re a young company trying to foster positivity and appreciation of food, but we have a lot to learn. So if you are a big eater, order in a bunch, are indecisive like us, or just want to know what the best dishes are nearby, do check out the app! Shoot us a message at vaibhav@usesimmer.com - we’re eager to hear this community’s ideas, experiences, and feedback :) Download: https://ift.tt/2OgXGXU
1 by vaibhavverma9 | 0 comments on Hacker News.
Hi HackerNews community! We’re Vaibhav and Richard, founders of Simmer ( https://usesimmer.com ). Simmer aggregates dishes from DoorDash, Caviar, GrubHub, and basically every other delivery platform out there, and tells users the best dishes across the board. We do this by providing dish-level reviews. Users find highly reviewed dishes on Simmer, choose the delivery platform of their liking, and we deep link them into their chosen delivery app. We essentially lead gen to delivery. We started working on Simmer because we loved trying new restaurants, but never knew what to order. Especially, when there’s a 5 page menu. We always asked ourselves, “Why aren’t there ratings for individual dishes?” We launched our app with this restaurant-centric use case (reviews for every dish at every restaurant), but when we rolled out delivery integrations, we realized that users resonated most with the delivery angle. They found it particularly difficult to find great dishes on delivery (after all, there are no waiters to give you recommendations). As a result, we have doubled down on becoming an aggregator of delivery dishes across platforms. So far, the app features hundreds of restaurants (and even more dishes) that deliver in New York, Chicago, and San Francisco. We’re a young company trying to foster positivity and appreciation of food, but we have a lot to learn. So if you are a big eater, order in a bunch, are indecisive like us, or just want to know what the best dishes are nearby, do check out the app! Shoot us a message at vaibhav@usesimmer.com - we’re eager to hear this community’s ideas, experiences, and feedback :) Download: https://ift.tt/2OgXGXU
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Show HN: Minimal Twitter – drastically simplify and declutter the new Twitter UI
2 by thomaswangio | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by thomaswangio | 0 comments on Hacker News.
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Show HN: I made a site that lets you easily find live-coding streams
2 by devcrato | 1 comments on Hacker News.
2 by devcrato | 1 comments on Hacker News.
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Show HN: A tool to convert jupyter notebooks to beautiful blogs
2 by hemanta212 | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by hemanta212 | 0 comments on Hacker News.
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Show HN: Qanairy Beta – AI Powered UI Testing Service
3 by deepthought42 | 1 comments on Hacker News.
3 by deepthought42 | 1 comments on Hacker News.
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Show HN: A tool to create printable UI mockups and wireframes templates
2 by eg312 | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by eg312 | 0 comments on Hacker News.
Tuesday, 23 July 2019
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Show HN: MailSlurp – Test your application with real email addresses
2 by LaunchPropeller | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by LaunchPropeller | 0 comments on Hacker News.
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Show HN: No CS Degree – Interviews with Self-Taught Devs
2 by Pete-Codes | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by Pete-Codes | 0 comments on Hacker News.
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Show HN: MetalShell – Build GUIs for JVM Apps with HTML, CSS and JavaScript
3 by struppi | 1 comments on Hacker News.
3 by struppi | 1 comments on Hacker News.
Monday, 22 July 2019
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Show HN: A visualization of the top 164,720 texts in a database of 6M syllabi
2 by clured | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by clured | 0 comments on Hacker News.
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Show HN: Using SHA256 hashes to make every website visit truly private
4 by JackWritesCode | 0 comments on Hacker News.
4 by JackWritesCode | 0 comments on Hacker News.
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Show HN: Zero to Startup in 10 Weeks (Following YC Startup School)
2 by davnicwil | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by davnicwil | 0 comments on Hacker News.
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Show HN: Rocketship (beta) – a resume-free job matching taxonomy for developers
3 by RicStrong | 1 comments on Hacker News.
3 by RicStrong | 1 comments on Hacker News.
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Show HN: StoryScroll – Turn web pages into scrolling videos for Instagram
2 by nealrs | 1 comments on Hacker News.
2 by nealrs | 1 comments on Hacker News.
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Show HN: unYouTube - Mindful entertainment with curated videos
3 by thisisrajat | 0 comments on Hacker News.
3 by thisisrajat | 0 comments on Hacker News.
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Show HN: Tiger Boss – Real Humans Get You Get Stuff Done
2 by themost123 | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by themost123 | 0 comments on Hacker News.
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Show HN: Adjourn – A meeting minutes app to organize your meetings
2 by adjournio | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by adjournio | 0 comments on Hacker News.
Sunday, 21 July 2019
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Show HN: OnionSite is a project to let Internet users access Tor Onion Services
2 by kesara9 | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by kesara9 | 0 comments on Hacker News.
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Show HN: Learn how to build profitable SaaS startups together
2 by krm01 | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by krm01 | 0 comments on Hacker News.
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Show HN: Learnawesome.org – Discover the best learning resources on any topic
6 by mathnmusic | 2 comments on Hacker News.
Hi HN, Over past few months, some of us had been collecting links to learning resources (courses, interactive explorables, books, podcasts, apps, forums, livestreams etc) in a GitHub repository of markdown files. Since we also wanted to have features like advanced search ("Show me podcasts on machine learning which are entertaining and less than 40 minutes long"), we felt the need for an app. Give it a try: https://ift.tt/2y678SN You can think of LearnAwesome.org as a GoodReads-equivalent tool generalized to links to ALL media (not just books). Some features you might like: - Advanced search on topics, formats, length, and quality tags (interactive/visual/challenging/entertaining etc) - A browser extension to show reviews on your current tab or quickly add it to LearnAwesome - Automatic data extraction for links from GoodReads etc. - Embeddable widgets so that you can show off your learning activity (such as books read) on your personal websites - Random item (which can also be restricted to your favorite topics) - A point system for contributors Coming soon: - Topic-specific chat rooms to find fellow learners - See recommendations only from people you follow (i.e. unidirectional graph) - Connections across items to discover whether an author of a book or a teacher of a course has also presented the same ideas in a video, or an article - saving you time. Do expect a few rough edges here and there, but feedback is very welcome.
6 by mathnmusic | 2 comments on Hacker News.
Hi HN, Over past few months, some of us had been collecting links to learning resources (courses, interactive explorables, books, podcasts, apps, forums, livestreams etc) in a GitHub repository of markdown files. Since we also wanted to have features like advanced search ("Show me podcasts on machine learning which are entertaining and less than 40 minutes long"), we felt the need for an app. Give it a try: https://ift.tt/2y678SN You can think of LearnAwesome.org as a GoodReads-equivalent tool generalized to links to ALL media (not just books). Some features you might like: - Advanced search on topics, formats, length, and quality tags (interactive/visual/challenging/entertaining etc) - A browser extension to show reviews on your current tab or quickly add it to LearnAwesome - Automatic data extraction for links from GoodReads etc. - Embeddable widgets so that you can show off your learning activity (such as books read) on your personal websites - Random item (which can also be restricted to your favorite topics) - A point system for contributors Coming soon: - Topic-specific chat rooms to find fellow learners - See recommendations only from people you follow (i.e. unidirectional graph) - Connections across items to discover whether an author of a book or a teacher of a course has also presented the same ideas in a video, or an article - saving you time. Do expect a few rough edges here and there, but feedback is very welcome.
New Show Hacker News story: latest news
Show HN: I built tick-by-tick crypto market data replay API
4 by tardis_thad | 0 comments on Hacker News.
4 by tardis_thad | 0 comments on Hacker News.
New Show Hacker News story: latest news
Show HN: A weekend replication of STOKE, a stochastic superoptimiser
2 by bollu | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by bollu | 0 comments on Hacker News.
Saturday, 20 July 2019
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Show HN: A Clojure implementation of logic programming language in SICP
2 by jdormit | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by jdormit | 0 comments on Hacker News.
New Show Hacker News story: latest news
Show HN: A thin Python library to access HN data using Algolia's API
2 by santiagobasulto | 0 comments on Hacker News.
Hello community. Some time ago I was trying to create a project for my students using Hacker News data. As you might know, HN offers an official API [0], but it's based on Firebase and I felt it's main usage is to build clients, rather than consult data. I found out that Algolia also provides an official REST API [1]. It's exactly what I needed: the ability to "search" HN. Either by keywords, type of stories (Show HN, Ask HN, etc) and/or date. So I created a thin python wrapper on top of Algolia's Search API: https://ift.tt/2Z4ngQG The library is in early stage, but already usable. A few examples: How to search posts from one user: results = search_by_date( author='pg', hits_per_page=1000) How to search posts by type (this would find this same post) results = search_by_date( 'thin python library', show_hn=True, hits_per_page=1000) I'm working on implementing the the other methods. If you have suggestions please bring them up! [0] https://ift.tt/1s98Sn3 [1] https://ift.tt/1eaWICc
2 by santiagobasulto | 0 comments on Hacker News.
Hello community. Some time ago I was trying to create a project for my students using Hacker News data. As you might know, HN offers an official API [0], but it's based on Firebase and I felt it's main usage is to build clients, rather than consult data. I found out that Algolia also provides an official REST API [1]. It's exactly what I needed: the ability to "search" HN. Either by keywords, type of stories (Show HN, Ask HN, etc) and/or date. So I created a thin python wrapper on top of Algolia's Search API: https://ift.tt/2Z4ngQG The library is in early stage, but already usable. A few examples: How to search posts from one user: results = search_by_date( author='pg', hits_per_page=1000) How to search posts by type (this would find this same post) results = search_by_date( 'thin python library', show_hn=True, hits_per_page=1000) I'm working on implementing the the other methods. If you have suggestions please bring them up! [0] https://ift.tt/1s98Sn3 [1] https://ift.tt/1eaWICc
Friday, 19 July 2019
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Show HN: Dataset of 125k Medium Blog Post Titles and Subtitles (With Categories)
4 by minxomat | 0 comments on Hacker News.
4 by minxomat | 0 comments on Hacker News.
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Show HN: Oui – A web interface for OpenWrt implemented in Vue.js and Element-UI
19 by zhaojh329 | 8 comments on Hacker News.
19 by zhaojh329 | 8 comments on Hacker News.
Thursday, 18 July 2019
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Show HN: Plugserv – a tiny ad server just for your own projects
2 by simon_weber | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by simon_weber | 0 comments on Hacker News.
New Show Hacker News story: latest news
Show HN: Eary – the easiest way to listen to audiobooks on Spotify
2 by FreyFabian | 1 comments on Hacker News.
2 by FreyFabian | 1 comments on Hacker News.
New Show Hacker News story: latest news
Show HN: Civitas – An empire-building game written in JavaScript
2 by lcsoft | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by lcsoft | 0 comments on Hacker News.
New Show Hacker News story: latest news
Show HN: I'm building visualization of places to book online taxi in Bali
2 by wilbertliu | 2 comments on Hacker News.
2 by wilbertliu | 2 comments on Hacker News.
New Show Hacker News story: latest news
Show HN: GraphQL Zeus – Autocomplete GraphQL Queries in JavaScript and TS
2 by aexol | 1 comments on Hacker News.
2 by aexol | 1 comments on Hacker News.
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Show HN: A browser extension that makes switching between tabs easier
5 by dvdvdmt | 1 comments on Hacker News.
5 by dvdvdmt | 1 comments on Hacker News.
Wednesday, 17 July 2019
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Show HN: Apisentris Converts MySQL, PostgreSQL and MongoDB to RESTful API
3 by ardian_b | 0 comments on Hacker News.
INTRO: Hi HN community, it is been 2 years since I developed Apisentris (https://apisentris.com) that initially aimed to make my big brother easier to consuming data from his database (MySQL, back then). He is non programmer and wanted me to create some programming scripts to do his jobs. I found out "Database to API" libraries already out there but we have to do some programming works and server configuration to make them work. So that's the idea, what if there is a platform that would instantly generates API from database(s) without (reduce) all of scary configs stuff and backend coding things. I talked to my programmer fellas about this idea and the responses was possitive. They said that it will be useful for frontend developers as well. Then I started to code. WHAT DOES APISENTRIS DO: - Converts MySQL, MongoDB, PostgreSQL and Google BigQuery to RESTful API - Whitelist API consumers (you can allow only specific domains / ip addresses able to access your APIs) - Multiple databases in single account - Unified API endpoints across databases - Team collaboration - Filtering and paging - Custom endpoint (Intended for complex query, e.g. full text search, geospatial query and aggregate) - More features coming soon :) Demo: https://ift.tt/2GjsyR3 (Dymanic site without backend, only HTML and JS) Its tutorial: https://ift.tt/2YYdy2h THE FUTURE: You can find my roadmap for this project on Trello here: https://ift.tt/2GdT2mP Just ping me in comments below if you have any question or feedback. Many thanks!
3 by ardian_b | 0 comments on Hacker News.
INTRO: Hi HN community, it is been 2 years since I developed Apisentris (https://apisentris.com) that initially aimed to make my big brother easier to consuming data from his database (MySQL, back then). He is non programmer and wanted me to create some programming scripts to do his jobs. I found out "Database to API" libraries already out there but we have to do some programming works and server configuration to make them work. So that's the idea, what if there is a platform that would instantly generates API from database(s) without (reduce) all of scary configs stuff and backend coding things. I talked to my programmer fellas about this idea and the responses was possitive. They said that it will be useful for frontend developers as well. Then I started to code. WHAT DOES APISENTRIS DO: - Converts MySQL, MongoDB, PostgreSQL and Google BigQuery to RESTful API - Whitelist API consumers (you can allow only specific domains / ip addresses able to access your APIs) - Multiple databases in single account - Unified API endpoints across databases - Team collaboration - Filtering and paging - Custom endpoint (Intended for complex query, e.g. full text search, geospatial query and aggregate) - More features coming soon :) Demo: https://ift.tt/2GjsyR3 (Dymanic site without backend, only HTML and JS) Its tutorial: https://ift.tt/2YYdy2h THE FUTURE: You can find my roadmap for this project on Trello here: https://ift.tt/2GdT2mP Just ping me in comments below if you have any question or feedback. Many thanks!
New Show Hacker News story: latest news
Show HN: Savedreplies.io – start using canned response everywhere
2 by mike97 | 1 comments on Hacker News.
2 by mike97 | 1 comments on Hacker News.
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Show HN: LaunchPropeller – Micro services to help you launch you project
2 by wishrider | 1 comments on Hacker News.
2 by wishrider | 1 comments on Hacker News.
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Launch HN: Wren (YC S19) – Offset Your Carbon Footprint
4 by landon32 | 0 comments on Hacker News.
Hi HN, We're Mimi, Ben, and Landon, founders of Wren ( https://projectwren.com ). Wren lets you offset your carbon footprint by funding projects that prevent or sequester greenhouse gas emissions. It works by calculating your carbon footprint and then funding a project of your choice through a monthly subscription. Some of the projects we have right now involve planting forests in East Africa, providing more efficient cookstoves to Ugandan refugees, and preventing deforestation in the Amazon. We met in college, and worked together on numerous side projects and class projects. After a while we decided to try finding a meaningful project that we could work on after graduation. At the time, we didn't know much about the science or emerging technologies for mitigating climate change, but we saw carbon offsets and asked ourselves "why isn't everyone doing this?" Then we got to work on Wren. Carbon offsets have been around for a while, and with some googling, research, and phone calls anyone can find reliable and transparent projects. Our goal is to make it as easy and enjoyable as possible to offset your footprint. We only work with projects that have good evidence suggesting they're long lasting and reliable. We also only work with projects that wouldn't happen without support from Wren users. In addition to climate benefits, we prefer projects with strong social impact. Projects listed on Wren reduce lung cancer risk for refugees, provide millions of dollars of economic benefit to subsistence farmers, and protect biodiversity. We see climate change as the most important problem we can work on. Despite growing evidence of the damage it will cause, governments are not taking necessary action. Wren is a way for an individual to have impact today. Most in this space are nonprofits but we are a business. We take a 20% fee on each subscription. This allows us to hire talented engineers, invest in marketing, and raise capital. This way we can build tools that make our projects more transparent and reliable—daily satellite images of forest projects, data visualizations of tree trunk diameters, and other ways we can build more trust for these projects. I've seen a lot of posts on HN recently about climate change and potential solutions so I'm looking forward to a good discussion :)
4 by landon32 | 0 comments on Hacker News.
Hi HN, We're Mimi, Ben, and Landon, founders of Wren ( https://projectwren.com ). Wren lets you offset your carbon footprint by funding projects that prevent or sequester greenhouse gas emissions. It works by calculating your carbon footprint and then funding a project of your choice through a monthly subscription. Some of the projects we have right now involve planting forests in East Africa, providing more efficient cookstoves to Ugandan refugees, and preventing deforestation in the Amazon. We met in college, and worked together on numerous side projects and class projects. After a while we decided to try finding a meaningful project that we could work on after graduation. At the time, we didn't know much about the science or emerging technologies for mitigating climate change, but we saw carbon offsets and asked ourselves "why isn't everyone doing this?" Then we got to work on Wren. Carbon offsets have been around for a while, and with some googling, research, and phone calls anyone can find reliable and transparent projects. Our goal is to make it as easy and enjoyable as possible to offset your footprint. We only work with projects that have good evidence suggesting they're long lasting and reliable. We also only work with projects that wouldn't happen without support from Wren users. In addition to climate benefits, we prefer projects with strong social impact. Projects listed on Wren reduce lung cancer risk for refugees, provide millions of dollars of economic benefit to subsistence farmers, and protect biodiversity. We see climate change as the most important problem we can work on. Despite growing evidence of the damage it will cause, governments are not taking necessary action. Wren is a way for an individual to have impact today. Most in this space are nonprofits but we are a business. We take a 20% fee on each subscription. This allows us to hire talented engineers, invest in marketing, and raise capital. This way we can build tools that make our projects more transparent and reliable—daily satellite images of forest projects, data visualizations of tree trunk diameters, and other ways we can build more trust for these projects. I've seen a lot of posts on HN recently about climate change and potential solutions so I'm looking forward to a good discussion :)
New Show Hacker News story: latest news
Show HN: A database of 200k+ podcasts with emails to feature your business
3 by juhaszhenderson | 0 comments on Hacker News.
Hey guys! Podcast List (https://ift.tt/2xQeMAL) is a categorized database of 200k+ podcasts with emails & tags to help you find and pitch podcasts to cover your business. Podcasts are the newest form of media outlet, and coverage of you, your product, or your business can generate tons of attention quickly. Most podcast lists are designed for people trying to find new podcasts to listen to, which is only marginally helpful for marketers. For Podcast List we’ve designed the ideal list for entrepreneurs and marketers trying to find the right podcast to pitch their story to––either as an organic story/interview or as an advertisement. Podcast List includes emails, tags & categories, hosts, titles, logos, the number of episodes, links to social media accounts & websites, and links to the podcast’s iTunes page. To help you find even more coverage opportunities for your product, we've integrated this into our product Press Hunt which means as a bonus you’ll also get access to: 1. Our database of 400k journalists from all over the world 2. The ability to build lists of your favorite podcasts & journalists ️ 3. The ability to export their contact data to CSV so you can easily run email outreach campaigns Our plans start at $69/mo, but we’ve made a special 50% off forever lifetime discount code for early adopters on Hacker News: ‘EARLYADOPTERS’. This code expires this week. As always we’d love feedback––thanks for taking the time to read this - Matt & Aaron from Press Hunt PS: We also just launched on Product Hunt: https://ift.tt/2XSoi0T
3 by juhaszhenderson | 0 comments on Hacker News.
Hey guys! Podcast List (https://ift.tt/2xQeMAL) is a categorized database of 200k+ podcasts with emails & tags to help you find and pitch podcasts to cover your business. Podcasts are the newest form of media outlet, and coverage of you, your product, or your business can generate tons of attention quickly. Most podcast lists are designed for people trying to find new podcasts to listen to, which is only marginally helpful for marketers. For Podcast List we’ve designed the ideal list for entrepreneurs and marketers trying to find the right podcast to pitch their story to––either as an organic story/interview or as an advertisement. Podcast List includes emails, tags & categories, hosts, titles, logos, the number of episodes, links to social media accounts & websites, and links to the podcast’s iTunes page. To help you find even more coverage opportunities for your product, we've integrated this into our product Press Hunt which means as a bonus you’ll also get access to: 1. Our database of 400k journalists from all over the world 2. The ability to build lists of your favorite podcasts & journalists ️ 3. The ability to export their contact data to CSV so you can easily run email outreach campaigns Our plans start at $69/mo, but we’ve made a special 50% off forever lifetime discount code for early adopters on Hacker News: ‘EARLYADOPTERS’. This code expires this week. As always we’d love feedback––thanks for taking the time to read this - Matt & Aaron from Press Hunt PS: We also just launched on Product Hunt: https://ift.tt/2XSoi0T
New Show Hacker News story: latest news
Show HN: Ciao – HTTP checks and tests monitoring – check the status of your URL
2 by brotandgames | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by brotandgames | 0 comments on Hacker News.
New Show Hacker News story: latest news
Show HN: Cedreo is officially available to American and German users
2 by cedreo | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by cedreo | 0 comments on Hacker News.
New Show Hacker News story: latest news
Show HN: A bill tracker with auto categorisation, OCR and email integration
2 by timetoogo | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by timetoogo | 0 comments on Hacker News.
Tuesday, 16 July 2019
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Show HN: M3 – A high performance WebAssembly interpreter in C
2 by sound_and_form | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by sound_and_form | 0 comments on Hacker News.
New Show Hacker News story: latest news
Show HN: Playlistor – Convert Apple Music Playlists to Spotify
2 by badmon | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by badmon | 0 comments on Hacker News.
New Show Hacker News story: latest news
Show HN: A program goes through imgur albums and finds all duplicate images
2 by netb258 | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by netb258 | 0 comments on Hacker News.
New Show Hacker News story: latest news
Show HN: Aquaman: Build composable, declarative flows with Redux
2 by baron816 | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by baron816 | 0 comments on Hacker News.
New Show Hacker News story: latest news
Show HN: LessPhone, A minimal android launcher to reduce phone use
2 by aswinmohanme | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by aswinmohanme | 0 comments on Hacker News.
New Show Hacker News story: latest news
Show HN: OctoSQL – Query and Join multiple databases and files, written in Go
2 by cube2222 | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by cube2222 | 0 comments on Hacker News.
New Show Hacker News story: latest news
Show HN: Pisa – Probably the Fastest Full-Text Search Engine Out There
2 by amallia | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by amallia | 0 comments on Hacker News.
Monday, 15 July 2019
New Show Hacker News story: latest news
Show HN: Osgood – A secure, fast, and simple JavaScript server platform
6 by tlhunter | 0 comments on Hacker News.
6 by tlhunter | 0 comments on Hacker News.
New Show Hacker News story: latest news
Show HN: Mobile market intelligence platform for your sales team
2 by riyakhanna1983 | 1 comments on Hacker News.
Hello! We have been working on building a mobile market intelligence platform targeting user acquisition and growth: https://appnitio.com You can track mobile apps that use your or your competitor's SDK with real-time custom alerts and discover new opportunities for your business. We would love to hear any feedback you may have for us. Thanks!
2 by riyakhanna1983 | 1 comments on Hacker News.
Hello! We have been working on building a mobile market intelligence platform targeting user acquisition and growth: https://appnitio.com You can track mobile apps that use your or your competitor's SDK with real-time custom alerts and discover new opportunities for your business. We would love to hear any feedback you may have for us. Thanks!
New Show Hacker News story: latest news
Show HN: Commit Hawk – Get notified when specific files change in a GitHub repo
2 by jesalg | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by jesalg | 0 comments on Hacker News.
New Show Hacker News story: latest news
Launch HN: Build your app fast with our free and beautiful UI Kit
2 by johnnyB1235 | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by johnnyB1235 | 0 comments on Hacker News.
New Show Hacker News story: latest news
Show HN: I analyzed the history of “Who is Hiring?” threads
1 by philipkiely | 1 comments on Hacker News.
1 by philipkiely | 1 comments on Hacker News.
New Show Hacker News story: latest news
Launch HN: Dataform (YC W18) – Build Reliable SQL Data Pipelines as a Team
5 by G2H | 0 comments on Hacker News.
Hi HN! We’re Guillaume and Lewis, founders of Dataform, and we're excited (and nervous) to be posting this on HN. Dataform is a platform for data analysts to manage data workflows in cloud data warehouses such as Google BigQuery, Amazon Redshift or Snowflake. With our open source framework and our web app, analysts can develop and schedule reliable pipelines to turn raw data into reliable datasets they need for analytics. Before starting Dataform, we managed engineering teams in AdSense and led product analytics for publisher ads. We heavily relied on data (and data pipelines!) to generate insights, drive better decisions and build better products. Companies like Google invest a lot to build internal data tools for analysts to manage data and build data pipelines. In 5 minutes I could define a new dataset in SQL that would be updated every day and then use it in my reports. Most businesses today are centralising their raw data into cloud data warehouses but lack the tools to manage it efficiently. Pipelines run manually or via custom scripts that break often. Or the company decides to invest engineering resources to set up, maintain and debug a framework like Airflow. But that’s just for scheduling and the technical bar is often too high for analysts to contribute. We saw a need for a self-service solution for data teams to manage data efficiently, so that analysts can own the entire workflow from raw data to analytics. We built Dataform with two core principles in mind: 1. Bring engineering best practices to data management. In Dataform, you build data pipelines in SQL, and our open source framework lets you seamlessly define dependencies, build incremental tables and reuse code across scripts. You can write tests against your raw and transformed data to ensure data quality across your analytics. Lastly, our development environment also facilitates the adoption of best practices, where analysts can develop with version control, code review or sandboxed environments. 2. Let data teams focus on data, not infrastructure. We want to bring a better, faster and cheaper alternative to what businesses have to build and maintain in-house today. Our web app comes with a collaborative SQL editor, where teams develop and push their changes to GitHub. You can then orchestrate your data pipelines without having to maintain any infrastructure. Here's is a short video demo where we develop two new datasets, push the code to GitHub and schedule their execution, in under 5 minutes. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=axDKf0_FhYU You can sign up at https://dataform.co . If you're curious how it works - here are the docs: https://ift.tt/2jVt3cg and the link to our open framework: https://ift.tt/2XSI8cq We would love to hear your feedback and answer any questions you might have! Lewis and Guillaume
5 by G2H | 0 comments on Hacker News.
Hi HN! We’re Guillaume and Lewis, founders of Dataform, and we're excited (and nervous) to be posting this on HN. Dataform is a platform for data analysts to manage data workflows in cloud data warehouses such as Google BigQuery, Amazon Redshift or Snowflake. With our open source framework and our web app, analysts can develop and schedule reliable pipelines to turn raw data into reliable datasets they need for analytics. Before starting Dataform, we managed engineering teams in AdSense and led product analytics for publisher ads. We heavily relied on data (and data pipelines!) to generate insights, drive better decisions and build better products. Companies like Google invest a lot to build internal data tools for analysts to manage data and build data pipelines. In 5 minutes I could define a new dataset in SQL that would be updated every day and then use it in my reports. Most businesses today are centralising their raw data into cloud data warehouses but lack the tools to manage it efficiently. Pipelines run manually or via custom scripts that break often. Or the company decides to invest engineering resources to set up, maintain and debug a framework like Airflow. But that’s just for scheduling and the technical bar is often too high for analysts to contribute. We saw a need for a self-service solution for data teams to manage data efficiently, so that analysts can own the entire workflow from raw data to analytics. We built Dataform with two core principles in mind: 1. Bring engineering best practices to data management. In Dataform, you build data pipelines in SQL, and our open source framework lets you seamlessly define dependencies, build incremental tables and reuse code across scripts. You can write tests against your raw and transformed data to ensure data quality across your analytics. Lastly, our development environment also facilitates the adoption of best practices, where analysts can develop with version control, code review or sandboxed environments. 2. Let data teams focus on data, not infrastructure. We want to bring a better, faster and cheaper alternative to what businesses have to build and maintain in-house today. Our web app comes with a collaborative SQL editor, where teams develop and push their changes to GitHub. You can then orchestrate your data pipelines without having to maintain any infrastructure. Here's is a short video demo where we develop two new datasets, push the code to GitHub and schedule their execution, in under 5 minutes. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=axDKf0_FhYU You can sign up at https://dataform.co . If you're curious how it works - here are the docs: https://ift.tt/2jVt3cg and the link to our open framework: https://ift.tt/2XSI8cq We would love to hear your feedback and answer any questions you might have! Lewis and Guillaume
New Show Hacker News story: latest news
Show HN: The Climate Fixathon- Online hackathon for makers to fix the climate
2 by jpaulet | 0 comments on Hacker News.
The Climate Fixathon (https://fixathon.io/) is a 4-week online hackathon for individuals or teams to use their tech skills to launch a website, app or service intended to help restore a safe climate for our planet. It runs from 2nd-30th August with a prize value of $10k+. AWARDS ️ Awareness - Most likely to raise awareness of climate breakdown. Action - Most likely to help people take action against climate breakdown. ️ Facilitation - Most likely to make climate breakdown related tech projects easier to create in the future. WHAT YOU CAN WIN Our 3 winning team will each receive $1,500 cash to spend. Free Egghead.io licenses Free Sketch licenses Free Kirby licenses Free Drawkit illustrations 100 trees planted by Offset Earth Our 3 runner ups will each get $300 cash to spend. 25 trees planted by Offset Earth We hope that given this opportunity, we’ll get to see hundreds of techies from around the world using their skills to help fix the climate. We can't wait to see what they make :D
2 by jpaulet | 0 comments on Hacker News.
The Climate Fixathon (https://fixathon.io/) is a 4-week online hackathon for individuals or teams to use their tech skills to launch a website, app or service intended to help restore a safe climate for our planet. It runs from 2nd-30th August with a prize value of $10k+. AWARDS ️ Awareness - Most likely to raise awareness of climate breakdown. Action - Most likely to help people take action against climate breakdown. ️ Facilitation - Most likely to make climate breakdown related tech projects easier to create in the future. WHAT YOU CAN WIN Our 3 winning team will each receive $1,500 cash to spend. Free Egghead.io licenses Free Sketch licenses Free Kirby licenses Free Drawkit illustrations 100 trees planted by Offset Earth Our 3 runner ups will each get $300 cash to spend. 25 trees planted by Offset Earth We hope that given this opportunity, we’ll get to see hundreds of techies from around the world using their skills to help fix the climate. We can't wait to see what they make :D
New Show Hacker News story: latest news
Show HN: ImportDoc – Use the content from a Google Doc in any web page
2 by aev3O | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by aev3O | 0 comments on Hacker News.
New Show Hacker News story: latest news
Show HN: Add an always-on video hangout to your Slack channel
4 by drpancake | 1 comments on Hacker News.
4 by drpancake | 1 comments on Hacker News.
Sunday, 14 July 2019
New Show Hacker News story: latest news
Show HN: Espresso-hole – ESPRESSObin based personal router with ad blocking
1 by ric3rcar | 0 comments on Hacker News.
1 by ric3rcar | 0 comments on Hacker News.
New Show Hacker News story: latest news
Show HN: Check if a book on Amazon exists in your O'Reilly subscription
2 by colma | 1 comments on Hacker News.
2 by colma | 1 comments on Hacker News.
New Show Hacker News story: latest news
Show HN: Summer Pledge – you have 72 days until the end of summer
3 by romes | 0 comments on Hacker News.
3 by romes | 0 comments on Hacker News.
New Show Hacker News story: latest news
Show HN: Python Developer Job Board
2 by fullstackjob | 0 comments on Hacker News.
Today I release my 3. Job Board, running on my product https://ift.tt/2xFpJoG, for Python Developers: https://pythonjob.xyz
2 by fullstackjob | 0 comments on Hacker News.
Today I release my 3. Job Board, running on my product https://ift.tt/2xFpJoG, for Python Developers: https://pythonjob.xyz
Saturday, 13 July 2019
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Show HN: CloudCron: Run Docker-based cron jobs in cloud easily
2 by mathnmusic | 1 comments on Hacker News.
2 by mathnmusic | 1 comments on Hacker News.
New Show Hacker News story: latest news
Show HN: Reflections and Takeaways from Deconstruct Conference
2 by inoda | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by inoda | 0 comments on Hacker News.
New Show Hacker News story: latest news
Show HN: Lightweight Serverless on Kubernetes with MTLS and Traffic-Splitting
3 by alexellisuk | 0 comments on Hacker News.
3 by alexellisuk | 0 comments on Hacker News.
New Show Hacker News story: latest news
Show HN: Incubator as a Service – we build, launch and test your employees ideas
3 by overthinkerJS | 0 comments on Hacker News.
I've been wanting to experiment with this for a while. It's a subscription service for companies that want to utilise the new product or service ideas their employees come up with. With a fixed fee of $7500/mo, we'll basically work on up to 2 different ideas at the same time of your employees. This includes: - Designing & Building an MVP - Validating the idea and get early signups - Talk to early beta testers and gather feedback - Keep the original team/employee in the loop and have him/her participate into guiding the product further. When you decide the idea is ready for the next phase, you can build your own internal team or do so with our help. Interested, contact is in my bio
3 by overthinkerJS | 0 comments on Hacker News.
I've been wanting to experiment with this for a while. It's a subscription service for companies that want to utilise the new product or service ideas their employees come up with. With a fixed fee of $7500/mo, we'll basically work on up to 2 different ideas at the same time of your employees. This includes: - Designing & Building an MVP - Validating the idea and get early signups - Talk to early beta testers and gather feedback - Keep the original team/employee in the loop and have him/her participate into guiding the product further. When you decide the idea is ready for the next phase, you can build your own internal team or do so with our help. Interested, contact is in my bio
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Show HN: Sqlkit – Golang SQL package with nested transactions
4 by kodebrew | 0 comments on Hacker News.
4 by kodebrew | 0 comments on Hacker News.
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Show HN: Train a Neural Network to Control Lights by Dabbing
1 by burningion | 0 comments on Hacker News.
1 by burningion | 0 comments on Hacker News.
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Show HN: Secrets of Mastering Excel
4 by LeonB | 0 comments on Hacker News.
Inspired by a comment thread yesterday [1] I made this mini site: https://ift.tt/2GbvHSQ Reason: I often want to share Joel Spolsky's famous "You Suck at Excel" video tutorial with "important" business people inside the large enterprise where I work. But it would be easily misconstrued as trolling if I sent a business customer a URL that literally tells them, right in the heading, that they "suck" at excel. So, as advised by user @TuringTest (in the thread mentioned above) I created a mini site, on its own sub-domain, that is palatable to a business mindset, and brutally overlaid a heading that says "Secrets of Mastering Excel" right over the top of the "You Suck at Excel" heading. Now I've got something I can recommend to business people without causing disharmony. And I can leave a link to it in my email signature at work, to nudge my colleagues to improve their Excel game. [1] https://ift.tt/2Sgif55
4 by LeonB | 0 comments on Hacker News.
Inspired by a comment thread yesterday [1] I made this mini site: https://ift.tt/2GbvHSQ Reason: I often want to share Joel Spolsky's famous "You Suck at Excel" video tutorial with "important" business people inside the large enterprise where I work. But it would be easily misconstrued as trolling if I sent a business customer a URL that literally tells them, right in the heading, that they "suck" at excel. So, as advised by user @TuringTest (in the thread mentioned above) I created a mini site, on its own sub-domain, that is palatable to a business mindset, and brutally overlaid a heading that says "Secrets of Mastering Excel" right over the top of the "You Suck at Excel" heading. Now I've got something I can recommend to business people without causing disharmony. And I can leave a link to it in my email signature at work, to nudge my colleagues to improve their Excel game. [1] https://ift.tt/2Sgif55
Friday, 12 July 2019
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Show HN: Stein – Use Google Sheets as a No-Setup Database
2 by shivensinha4 | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by shivensinha4 | 0 comments on Hacker News.
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Show HN: Pisa – Probably the Fastest Full Text Search Engine Written in C++
2 by amallia | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by amallia | 0 comments on Hacker News.
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Show HN: Goodgigs – invoice builder that also helps raise funds for nonprofits
2 by slaydmedia | 1 comments on Hacker News.
2 by slaydmedia | 1 comments on Hacker News.
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Show HN: UselessMeetings – A simple tool for getting feedback on your meetings
2 by chadmckenna | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by chadmckenna | 0 comments on Hacker News.
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Show HN: Pisa – Probably the Fastest Full Text Search Engine Written in C++
2 by amallia | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by amallia | 0 comments on Hacker News.
Thursday, 11 July 2019
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Show HN: Chrome extension that changes "AI" to "A Bunch of Dudes"
2 by joeyyang | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by joeyyang | 0 comments on Hacker News.
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Show HN: BaseTable – a Table component with high performance and flexibility
2 by liteneo | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by liteneo | 0 comments on Hacker News.
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Show HN: CircleCI Config Generator Powered by TypeScript
3 by acro5piano | 1 comments on Hacker News.
3 by acro5piano | 1 comments on Hacker News.
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Show HN: I made an interactive hex calculator in ncurses
2 by stdcall83 | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by stdcall83 | 0 comments on Hacker News.
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Launch HN: Stacks (YC S14) – The first SEC-qualified crypto token offering
4 by muneeb | 1 comments on Hacker News.
I'm Muneeb, CEO & Co-founder of Blockstack PBC (YC S14). Blockstack is a decentralized computing network. We currently have 165+ apps built on top (https://blockstack.org). Today we're launching Stacks to the public, the first SEC-qualified crypto token offering. First, a little about our journey: I grew up in Pakistan with a single state-controlled TV channel. I've been obsessed with the internet since the dial-up days of the late 90s. I researched computer networks as a grad student. I took a leave from Princeton in 2013 to start Blockstack with my co-founder. Our rather ambitious goal was to build a better internet. We went through YC in 2014 and have raised $50M in capital so far. We believe that the "traditional internet" became dependent on a handful of companies. We want to take the internet back to its decentralized roots. We've done 4+ years of R&D and infrastructure building. We're focusing on giving developers the right tools to build decentralized apps. The big difference between these and traditional internet apps is that: (1) apps mostly run client-side (no servers or databases), (2) users are in control of their data with encrypted private data lockers, and (3) users have universal cryptographic logins without any third-party providers. Blockstack PBC is a public benefit corporation. We build the core protocols and developer tools for decentralized computing. Developers use our open-source reference implementations and SDKs to build decentralized apps. These include Graphite (decentralized Google docs), Dmail (encrypted email), BitPatron (decentralized Patreon), and others (https://ift.tt/2GGECxr). The Blockstack software stack gives developers decentralized solutions for auth and storage. Further, developers can program smart contracts. The Stacks blockchain is a foundational layer of our architecture. It executes smart contracts and enables our decentralized auth and storage to work without centralized operators. Users register their usernames on the Stacks blockchain and link their storage credentials. Technical details of our full decentralized computing stack are at https://ift.tt/2qnXepi. Stacks is the native crypto token of Blockstack. Stacks are used as "fuel" to register digital assets and execute smart contracts. Compared to other decentralized app platforms like Ethereum or EOS, we: (1) keep on-chain logic to a minimum, (2) scale apps by localizing state changes, and (3) enable developers to write general-purpose apps, not just smart contracts. Our regulatory approach is also very different from typical “ICOs” you may have seen. For distributing Stacks to the general public, we decided to work with US regulators. We wanted to open up the US market to our offering instead of blocking US investors. Yesterday, we received qualification from the SEC. The SEC has never qualified any token offering until now. Regulation A is often compared to a “mini IPO.” Our filing has fully-audited financials and seeks to provide fully transparent disclosures. There were a lot of legal and accounting treatment questions that we had to work on with the SEC. It’s new territory for everyone. It took us almost ten months to reach this stage and we spent close to 2 million USD in legal fees and other expenses. I joked at a recent event that I consider our expenditures a donation to the rest of the crypto industry. Other projects now have a legal framework for regulated crypto-token offerings. I know that many on HN are skeptical of the cryptocurrency market, which has become over-hyped with many bad actors. We share a lot of those feelings. We want to build on solid scientific foundations and give developers the right tools for scalable decentralized apps. Alternatives to centralized big tech monopolies can and will, eventually, exist. The SEC-qualified token offering is our effort to help mature this industry. You can find our SEC offering circular link at https://stackstoken.com. We'd love to get feedback from the HN community on our regulatory framework and tech design. Thanks! P.S: Given the regulated nature of this offering, I need to give disclaimers. Realize it’s not typical HN culture :-) — Muneeb Important disclaimer The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has qualified the offering statement that we have filed with the SEC. The information in that offering statement is more complete than the information we are providing now, and could differ in important ways. You must read the documents filed with the SEC before investing. The offering is being made only by means of its offering statement. This document shall not constitute an offer to sell or the solicitation of an offer to buy, nor shall there be any sale of these securities in any state or jurisdiction in which such offer, solicitation or sale would be unlawful prior to registration or qualification under the securities laws of any such state or jurisdiction. An indication of interest involves no obligation or commitment of any kind. Any person interested in investing in any offering of Stacks tokens should review our disclosures and the publicly filed offering statement and the final offering circular that is part of that offering statement at stackstoken.com/circular. Blockstack is not registered, licensed or supervised as a broker dealer or investment adviser by the SEC, the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) or any other financial regulatory authority or licensed to provide any financial advice or services. Forward-looking statements This communication contains forward-looking statements that are based on our beliefs and assumptions and on information currently available to us. In some cases, you can identify forward-looking statements by the following words: “will,” “expect,” “would,” “intend,” “believe,” or other comparable terminology. Forward-looking statements in this document include, but are not limited to, statements about our plans for developing the platform and future utility for the Stacks token, our Reg A+ offering and launch of our network, and collaborations and partnerships. These statements involve risks, uncertainties, assumptions and other factors that may cause actual results or performance to be materially different. More information on the factors, risks and uncertainties that could cause or contribute to such differences is included in our filings with the SEC, including in the “Risk Factors” and “Management’s Discussion & Analysis” sections of our offering statement on Form 1-A. We cannot assure you that the forward-looking statements will prove to be accurate. These forward-looking statements speak only as of the date hereof. We disclaim any obligation to update these forward-looking statements.
4 by muneeb | 1 comments on Hacker News.
I'm Muneeb, CEO & Co-founder of Blockstack PBC (YC S14). Blockstack is a decentralized computing network. We currently have 165+ apps built on top (https://blockstack.org). Today we're launching Stacks to the public, the first SEC-qualified crypto token offering. First, a little about our journey: I grew up in Pakistan with a single state-controlled TV channel. I've been obsessed with the internet since the dial-up days of the late 90s. I researched computer networks as a grad student. I took a leave from Princeton in 2013 to start Blockstack with my co-founder. Our rather ambitious goal was to build a better internet. We went through YC in 2014 and have raised $50M in capital so far. We believe that the "traditional internet" became dependent on a handful of companies. We want to take the internet back to its decentralized roots. We've done 4+ years of R&D and infrastructure building. We're focusing on giving developers the right tools to build decentralized apps. The big difference between these and traditional internet apps is that: (1) apps mostly run client-side (no servers or databases), (2) users are in control of their data with encrypted private data lockers, and (3) users have universal cryptographic logins without any third-party providers. Blockstack PBC is a public benefit corporation. We build the core protocols and developer tools for decentralized computing. Developers use our open-source reference implementations and SDKs to build decentralized apps. These include Graphite (decentralized Google docs), Dmail (encrypted email), BitPatron (decentralized Patreon), and others (https://ift.tt/2GGECxr). The Blockstack software stack gives developers decentralized solutions for auth and storage. Further, developers can program smart contracts. The Stacks blockchain is a foundational layer of our architecture. It executes smart contracts and enables our decentralized auth and storage to work without centralized operators. Users register their usernames on the Stacks blockchain and link their storage credentials. Technical details of our full decentralized computing stack are at https://ift.tt/2qnXepi. Stacks is the native crypto token of Blockstack. Stacks are used as "fuel" to register digital assets and execute smart contracts. Compared to other decentralized app platforms like Ethereum or EOS, we: (1) keep on-chain logic to a minimum, (2) scale apps by localizing state changes, and (3) enable developers to write general-purpose apps, not just smart contracts. Our regulatory approach is also very different from typical “ICOs” you may have seen. For distributing Stacks to the general public, we decided to work with US regulators. We wanted to open up the US market to our offering instead of blocking US investors. Yesterday, we received qualification from the SEC. The SEC has never qualified any token offering until now. Regulation A is often compared to a “mini IPO.” Our filing has fully-audited financials and seeks to provide fully transparent disclosures. There were a lot of legal and accounting treatment questions that we had to work on with the SEC. It’s new territory for everyone. It took us almost ten months to reach this stage and we spent close to 2 million USD in legal fees and other expenses. I joked at a recent event that I consider our expenditures a donation to the rest of the crypto industry. Other projects now have a legal framework for regulated crypto-token offerings. I know that many on HN are skeptical of the cryptocurrency market, which has become over-hyped with many bad actors. We share a lot of those feelings. We want to build on solid scientific foundations and give developers the right tools for scalable decentralized apps. Alternatives to centralized big tech monopolies can and will, eventually, exist. The SEC-qualified token offering is our effort to help mature this industry. You can find our SEC offering circular link at https://stackstoken.com. We'd love to get feedback from the HN community on our regulatory framework and tech design. Thanks! P.S: Given the regulated nature of this offering, I need to give disclaimers. Realize it’s not typical HN culture :-) — Muneeb Important disclaimer The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has qualified the offering statement that we have filed with the SEC. The information in that offering statement is more complete than the information we are providing now, and could differ in important ways. You must read the documents filed with the SEC before investing. The offering is being made only by means of its offering statement. This document shall not constitute an offer to sell or the solicitation of an offer to buy, nor shall there be any sale of these securities in any state or jurisdiction in which such offer, solicitation or sale would be unlawful prior to registration or qualification under the securities laws of any such state or jurisdiction. An indication of interest involves no obligation or commitment of any kind. Any person interested in investing in any offering of Stacks tokens should review our disclosures and the publicly filed offering statement and the final offering circular that is part of that offering statement at stackstoken.com/circular. Blockstack is not registered, licensed or supervised as a broker dealer or investment adviser by the SEC, the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) or any other financial regulatory authority or licensed to provide any financial advice or services. Forward-looking statements This communication contains forward-looking statements that are based on our beliefs and assumptions and on information currently available to us. In some cases, you can identify forward-looking statements by the following words: “will,” “expect,” “would,” “intend,” “believe,” or other comparable terminology. Forward-looking statements in this document include, but are not limited to, statements about our plans for developing the platform and future utility for the Stacks token, our Reg A+ offering and launch of our network, and collaborations and partnerships. These statements involve risks, uncertainties, assumptions and other factors that may cause actual results or performance to be materially different. More information on the factors, risks and uncertainties that could cause or contribute to such differences is included in our filings with the SEC, including in the “Risk Factors” and “Management’s Discussion & Analysis” sections of our offering statement on Form 1-A. We cannot assure you that the forward-looking statements will prove to be accurate. These forward-looking statements speak only as of the date hereof. We disclaim any obligation to update these forward-looking statements.
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Show HN: Accountbalance.io – bank account balance and transactions SMS service
2 by mindcube | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by mindcube | 0 comments on Hacker News.
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Show HN: Inlets 2.0 – expose your local endpoints to the Internet
2 by alexellisuk | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by alexellisuk | 0 comments on Hacker News.
Wednesday, 10 July 2019
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Show HN: Vim Plugin DoGe: [Do]cumentation [Ge]nerator (10+ Languages)
2 by koomenk | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by koomenk | 0 comments on Hacker News.
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Cloosiv (YC S19) – Order ahead from local coffee shops
1 by timgriffin77 | 0 comments on Hacker News.
We’re Tim and James and we’re building Cloosiv (https://cloosiv.com), an order-ahead app for independent coffee shops. We started working on this, because we believe that coffee is the most overlooked sub-vertical in retail. Coffee is the most repeated purchase that Americans make every day, with over 220M cups purchased daily at coffee shops, cafes, bakeries and diners. Starbucks is the largest chain, but they only process 2.5% of those daily sales. It’s the 50,000 independent merchants across the U.S. that sell the largest percentage. Starbucks' order-ahead app is actually the most-used mobile payment app in the US - more than Apple Pay and Google Pay - primarily because their users know that they can use the same mobile app at any Starbucks location. But the rest of the market, the other 97.5%, haven’t had a similar option. We’re focused on providing that same experience across independent coffee shops in the US. We consider the two of us meeting as our luckiest milestone to date. James had set out to build his own development agency at the same time that Tim was looking for help building v1 of Cloosiv. We met on Upwork and quickly realized that our skillsets complimented each other. That contract was James’ first and last while running his own agency. Since our initial launch in 2018, we’ve processed over 35,000 orders for $250,000+ in revenue on behalf of our coffee shop partners, with orders and volume growing 40% monthly. Our network includes over 200 local coffee shops, with another 150+ locations currently onboarding. We’ve been able to win these early customers by building our product alongside them. In addition to gaining their trust, this process has resulted in features that set us apart from incumbent ordering options. For example, our merchants can log in from any device and make on-the-fly changes. If they’ve run out of almond milk, they can remove that option with a single click, so that customers can’t order almond milk and be disappointed when they arrive. We're sometimes asked: why is no one else doing this? There are many mobile ordering apps, but they've all but ignored the coffee market. This is probably because the average coffee receipt is so low in comparison to the merchants they typically support. Another reason is the level of specificity that’s required to win the support of coffee merchants, who are keenly aware of customer expectation when serving time-sensitive, hot-temperature items like espresso. It turns out that a good app for ordering pizza is not the same thing as a good app for ordering coffee. We’ve been able to win coffee shops across the country by remaining hyper-focused on their market and its specific needs. This is an opportunity to build the most-used mobile payment option for the most commonly purchased commodity in the country. To be transparent, most of our current locations skew towards the east coast, because we’re based in Charlotte, NC and it’s where we gained initial traction. Our priority right now is to increase our presence on the west coast. If you wish your local coffee shop had an order ahead option, we’d really appreciate if you shared Cloosiv with them. We’re going to prioritize the most requested-by-HN shops for the next few weeks. You can submit a referral by clicking “Invite a Coffee Shop” on our website or in the app to get a $10 reward - mention Hacker News in the submission and we’ll do everything we can to get them on board! We'd also love to hear your ideas and feedback about anything and everything in this space! If you want to check out the app, download Cloosiv on your Apple or Android device and if there’s a shop around you, enter promo code HN-2019 at checkout and get 50% off any item. Ok, that's all from us. Please share your thoughts and ask any questions you’d like.
1 by timgriffin77 | 0 comments on Hacker News.
We’re Tim and James and we’re building Cloosiv (https://cloosiv.com), an order-ahead app for independent coffee shops. We started working on this, because we believe that coffee is the most overlooked sub-vertical in retail. Coffee is the most repeated purchase that Americans make every day, with over 220M cups purchased daily at coffee shops, cafes, bakeries and diners. Starbucks is the largest chain, but they only process 2.5% of those daily sales. It’s the 50,000 independent merchants across the U.S. that sell the largest percentage. Starbucks' order-ahead app is actually the most-used mobile payment app in the US - more than Apple Pay and Google Pay - primarily because their users know that they can use the same mobile app at any Starbucks location. But the rest of the market, the other 97.5%, haven’t had a similar option. We’re focused on providing that same experience across independent coffee shops in the US. We consider the two of us meeting as our luckiest milestone to date. James had set out to build his own development agency at the same time that Tim was looking for help building v1 of Cloosiv. We met on Upwork and quickly realized that our skillsets complimented each other. That contract was James’ first and last while running his own agency. Since our initial launch in 2018, we’ve processed over 35,000 orders for $250,000+ in revenue on behalf of our coffee shop partners, with orders and volume growing 40% monthly. Our network includes over 200 local coffee shops, with another 150+ locations currently onboarding. We’ve been able to win these early customers by building our product alongside them. In addition to gaining their trust, this process has resulted in features that set us apart from incumbent ordering options. For example, our merchants can log in from any device and make on-the-fly changes. If they’ve run out of almond milk, they can remove that option with a single click, so that customers can’t order almond milk and be disappointed when they arrive. We're sometimes asked: why is no one else doing this? There are many mobile ordering apps, but they've all but ignored the coffee market. This is probably because the average coffee receipt is so low in comparison to the merchants they typically support. Another reason is the level of specificity that’s required to win the support of coffee merchants, who are keenly aware of customer expectation when serving time-sensitive, hot-temperature items like espresso. It turns out that a good app for ordering pizza is not the same thing as a good app for ordering coffee. We’ve been able to win coffee shops across the country by remaining hyper-focused on their market and its specific needs. This is an opportunity to build the most-used mobile payment option for the most commonly purchased commodity in the country. To be transparent, most of our current locations skew towards the east coast, because we’re based in Charlotte, NC and it’s where we gained initial traction. Our priority right now is to increase our presence on the west coast. If you wish your local coffee shop had an order ahead option, we’d really appreciate if you shared Cloosiv with them. We’re going to prioritize the most requested-by-HN shops for the next few weeks. You can submit a referral by clicking “Invite a Coffee Shop” on our website or in the app to get a $10 reward - mention Hacker News in the submission and we’ll do everything we can to get them on board! We'd also love to hear your ideas and feedback about anything and everything in this space! If you want to check out the app, download Cloosiv on your Apple or Android device and if there’s a shop around you, enter promo code HN-2019 at checkout and get 50% off any item. Ok, that's all from us. Please share your thoughts and ask any questions you’d like.
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Show HN: WWBR – Who Wants to Be Relocated? (July 2019)
4 by andrewstetsenko | 0 comments on Hacker News.
4 by andrewstetsenko | 0 comments on Hacker News.
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Show HN: I built a UWP app to control TP-Link smart plugs
1 by bochoh | 0 comments on Hacker News.
I spent the last few weeks building a UWP app for Windows 10 that finally made it into the Windows Store. The biggest challenge was that UWP seems to have limitations with the .net version for UWP has a different API, particularly around the UDPClient API. Shameless plug, it's available here https://ift.tt/2XVqTLy Any ideas on what additional features you would like to see? I want to implement an energy monitoring report for those plugs that support it. If anyone has advice about a good free report generator compatible with UWP I'm all ears. Thanks!
1 by bochoh | 0 comments on Hacker News.
I spent the last few weeks building a UWP app for Windows 10 that finally made it into the Windows Store. The biggest challenge was that UWP seems to have limitations with the .net version for UWP has a different API, particularly around the UDPClient API. Shameless plug, it's available here https://ift.tt/2XVqTLy Any ideas on what additional features you would like to see? I want to implement an energy monitoring report for those plugs that support it. If anyone has advice about a good free report generator compatible with UWP I'm all ears. Thanks!
Tuesday, 9 July 2019
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Show HN: Single Platform to Convert MySQL, PostgreSQL and MongoDB to RESTful API
9 by ardian_b | 9 comments on Hacker News.
9 by ardian_b | 9 comments on Hacker News.
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Show HN: Practice data science interview questions in a newsletter
11 by data4lyfe | 2 comments on Hacker News.
11 by data4lyfe | 2 comments on Hacker News.
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Show HN: Audio Repeater Pro – Low latency audio streaming tool
2 by audiorepeater | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by audiorepeater | 0 comments on Hacker News.
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Show HN: Dino Cruise, a quick HTML 5 browser game I made for my 6-year-old son
2 by wilsocr88 | 2 comments on Hacker News.
2 by wilsocr88 | 2 comments on Hacker News.
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Show HN: Thought leadership writing tips for creators and editors
2 by jph | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by jph | 0 comments on Hacker News.
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Show HN: Extension Monitor to detect high-risk browser extensions
1 by flysonic10 | 0 comments on Hacker News.
1 by flysonic10 | 0 comments on Hacker News.
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Show HN:[BETA] Chatbot for sending physical poscards from whatsapp
2 by theveloped | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by theveloped | 0 comments on Hacker News.
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Show HN: Make your own AI-generated Magic: The Gathering cards with GPT-2
2 by minimaxir | 1 comments on Hacker News.
2 by minimaxir | 1 comments on Hacker News.
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Show HN: A relaxing mindful breathing companion to get you through the day
2 by _kush | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by _kush | 0 comments on Hacker News.
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Show HN: Ilograph – Interactive AWS Serverless Architecture Diagram
3 by Veuxdo | 0 comments on Hacker News.
3 by Veuxdo | 0 comments on Hacker News.
Monday, 8 July 2019
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Show HN: NPM Package Converting OHLC Candlestick Data to Heikin-Ashi in Node.js
3 by ourarash | 0 comments on Hacker News.
3 by ourarash | 0 comments on Hacker News.
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Show HN: Flushout - A distributed data model based on event sourcing
3 by willsaar | 0 comments on Hacker News.
3 by willsaar | 0 comments on Hacker News.
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Show HN: Material Bread – A React Native Material 2.0 Component Library
7 by abhiminator | 0 comments on Hacker News.
7 by abhiminator | 0 comments on Hacker News.
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Show HN: A website monitoring tool for front-end developers
3 by mostlystatic | 0 comments on Hacker News.
3 by mostlystatic | 0 comments on Hacker News.
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Show HN: EQBot – Ten year anniversary of an original earthquake tweet bot
2 by snitzr | 1 comments on Hacker News.
2 by snitzr | 1 comments on Hacker News.
Sunday, 7 July 2019
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Ask HN: What are your views on RelocationHero?
4 by relocationhero | 1 comments on Hacker News.
We have just started a new startup RelocationHero https://ift.tt/2YH243g to help people relocate to Berlin. As of now, we are just providing some helpful articles and content, but in future we are going to start a full-fledged consultancy. What are your views on this? Any suggestions/improvements/feedback?
4 by relocationhero | 1 comments on Hacker News.
We have just started a new startup RelocationHero https://ift.tt/2YH243g to help people relocate to Berlin. As of now, we are just providing some helpful articles and content, but in future we are going to start a full-fledged consultancy. What are your views on this? Any suggestions/improvements/feedback?
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Show HN: Classroomies – Learn from profitable SaaS founders, together with peers
2 by kareeeem | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by kareeeem | 0 comments on Hacker News.
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Show HN: Bvckup 2 – Fast File Replicator for Windows
2 by apankrat | 0 comments on Hacker News.
This is a long-running project that started as the proverbial need to scratch my own itch and then somehow evolved into a full-time job of the past 6 years. Link: https://bvckup2.com I thought I'd do a Show HN for two reasons. 1. I obviously want to show my baby to those who haven't seen it. Its primary purpose is to do very fast file replication. If you are familiar with "robocopy /mir" - same idea, but on steroids. Lots of them. It can also be used for both mirroring backups and archiving backups. It is light, very small and it is really quite fast. Half of the development time was sunk into the UI/UX design, so there's that too. Existing version is a result of 5 years of a _very_ careful evolution, focusing more on existing features rather than adding new ones. Said No to feature requests more times than I can remember. The blog captures some of that in a form of development screenshots, sketches and what not [1]. 2. Secondly, I wanted to add an anecdotal data point that the desktop software development is still very much an option despite of all the nasty rumors. The demand for well-written Windows software is still there. The biggest takeaway has been that there is LOTS of people, on Windows, that recognize software quality as a feature. They acknowledge and compliment it, and they are actively looking for it. That's the niche. If you are thinking of trying the Windows ISV path, I'd aim there. If anyone has any questions, I'd be happy to answer them if I can. -- By the way of introduction - I'm in my mid 40s. I've been a programmer for my entire life, mostly on the sysdev side of things - firewalls, network stacks, VPNs, etc. - which is one of the reasons I still like things to be as small and as fast as possible. I'm also the original author of Hamachi VPN, there's a chance you might've heard of it. -- [1] https://bvckup2.com/wip
2 by apankrat | 0 comments on Hacker News.
This is a long-running project that started as the proverbial need to scratch my own itch and then somehow evolved into a full-time job of the past 6 years. Link: https://bvckup2.com I thought I'd do a Show HN for two reasons. 1. I obviously want to show my baby to those who haven't seen it. Its primary purpose is to do very fast file replication. If you are familiar with "robocopy /mir" - same idea, but on steroids. Lots of them. It can also be used for both mirroring backups and archiving backups. It is light, very small and it is really quite fast. Half of the development time was sunk into the UI/UX design, so there's that too. Existing version is a result of 5 years of a _very_ careful evolution, focusing more on existing features rather than adding new ones. Said No to feature requests more times than I can remember. The blog captures some of that in a form of development screenshots, sketches and what not [1]. 2. Secondly, I wanted to add an anecdotal data point that the desktop software development is still very much an option despite of all the nasty rumors. The demand for well-written Windows software is still there. The biggest takeaway has been that there is LOTS of people, on Windows, that recognize software quality as a feature. They acknowledge and compliment it, and they are actively looking for it. That's the niche. If you are thinking of trying the Windows ISV path, I'd aim there. If anyone has any questions, I'd be happy to answer them if I can. -- By the way of introduction - I'm in my mid 40s. I've been a programmer for my entire life, mostly on the sysdev side of things - firewalls, network stacks, VPNs, etc. - which is one of the reasons I still like things to be as small and as fast as possible. I'm also the original author of Hamachi VPN, there's a chance you might've heard of it. -- [1] https://bvckup2.com/wip
Saturday, 6 July 2019
New Show Hacker News story: latest news
Show HN: An app I made to send customizable email summaries of subreddits
1 by deneb150 | 1 comments on Hacker News.
1 by deneb150 | 1 comments on Hacker News.
New Show Hacker News story: latest news
Show HN: Detect software running from JavaScript in a browser
2 by wybiral | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by wybiral | 0 comments on Hacker News.
New Show Hacker News story: latest news
Show HN: Shit, TinyGo Crazy Small WASM Binaries. Hack Go and WASM
3 by sendilkumarn | 0 comments on Hacker News.
3 by sendilkumarn | 0 comments on Hacker News.
Friday, 5 July 2019
New Show Hacker News story: latest news
Show HN: An ad-free news website with crowdsourced summaries
5 by thekyle | 0 comments on Hacker News.
5 by thekyle | 0 comments on Hacker News.
New Show Hacker News story: latest news
Show HN: Panalyze, Minimal Port Scanner Written in Node.js
2 by talonbragg | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by talonbragg | 0 comments on Hacker News.
New Show Hacker News story: latest news
Show HN: Calenvy.com – YC alum launches new scheduling app powered by email
2 by alexS | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by alexS | 0 comments on Hacker News.
New Show Hacker News story: latest news
Show HN: FunRetro – Improve your team with fun sprint retrospectives
3 by gdramos | 0 comments on Hacker News.
3 by gdramos | 0 comments on Hacker News.
New Show Hacker News story: latest news
Show HN: Swap Files or Directories Using Symlinks. Atomically. Partly
2 by mrothNET | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by mrothNET | 0 comments on Hacker News.
New Show Hacker News story: latest news
Show HN: Little site to help connect the people on your street together
2 by alance | 2 comments on Hacker News.
Sooo I got to thinking about how I don't really want to be FB friends with the people on my street, but that it would still be pretty useful to be able to chat about local issues with my neighbours. https://streetmates.net This idea probably isn't going to appeal to HN much. It's not very revolutionary. But there sort of seems to be a bit of a gap for this level of geographically-close, online communication. I'm thinking of approaching the marketing side of it with small flyers in people's mailboxes, just keep it small, target a street at a time, so that there's a bit of localized inertia in the signups. It definitely has the chicken-and-egg problem (i.e. why would I sign up when no-one on my street has signed up). If anyone's got any comments, ideas or feedback - then please shout out. There's no monetization strategy behind it (yet), and I very much like the idea of helping to facilitate the creation of little street communities.
2 by alance | 2 comments on Hacker News.
Sooo I got to thinking about how I don't really want to be FB friends with the people on my street, but that it would still be pretty useful to be able to chat about local issues with my neighbours. https://streetmates.net This idea probably isn't going to appeal to HN much. It's not very revolutionary. But there sort of seems to be a bit of a gap for this level of geographically-close, online communication. I'm thinking of approaching the marketing side of it with small flyers in people's mailboxes, just keep it small, target a street at a time, so that there's a bit of localized inertia in the signups. It definitely has the chicken-and-egg problem (i.e. why would I sign up when no-one on my street has signed up). If anyone's got any comments, ideas or feedback - then please shout out. There's no monetization strategy behind it (yet), and I very much like the idea of helping to facilitate the creation of little street communities.
Thursday, 4 July 2019
New Show Hacker News story: latest news
Show HN: Create GIFs from YouTube, Facebook, Twitter most sites that have videos
2 by builderone | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by builderone | 0 comments on Hacker News.
New Show Hacker News story: latest news
Show HN: A minimalist Mac app that helps you track, allocate, and plan your time
2 by aracena | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by aracena | 0 comments on Hacker News.
New Show Hacker News story: latest news
Show HN: moment-emoji, get a emoji for the time of the day
3 by oscargeorge | 1 comments on Hacker News.
3 by oscargeorge | 1 comments on Hacker News.
Wednesday, 3 July 2019
New Show Hacker News story: latest news
Show HN: FAQ Off – Open-Source Gamebook-Style Q&A Builder to Mitigate Trolls
2 by some_furry | 1 comments on Hacker News.
2 by some_furry | 1 comments on Hacker News.
New Show Hacker News story: latest news
Show HN: Income-inequality.info – visualize world income inequality
2 by yboris | 1 comments on Hacker News.
2 by yboris | 1 comments on Hacker News.
New Show Hacker News story: latest news
Show HN: SocialVault – Decentralized and encrypted storage for Facebook data
1 by dbrereton | 0 comments on Hacker News.
1 by dbrereton | 0 comments on Hacker News.
New Show Hacker News story: latest news
Show HN: Fractal.parts – View and design beautiful fractals
3 by epenson | 0 comments on Hacker News.
3 by epenson | 0 comments on Hacker News.
New Show Hacker News story: latest news
Show HN: A demo of Xlambda: A window manager extendable in Scheme
3 by lmilon | 0 comments on Hacker News.
3 by lmilon | 0 comments on Hacker News.
New Show Hacker News story: latest news
Show HN: A WebRTC/Material UI app that pairs users randomly
2 by speakrandom | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by speakrandom | 0 comments on Hacker News.
New Show Hacker News story: latest news
Show HN: A user interface for Postgres EXPLAIN that also gives tips
7 by michristofides | 1 comments on Hacker News.
7 by michristofides | 1 comments on Hacker News.
New Show Hacker News story: latest news
Show HN: Viso – Beautiful minimal image viewer for macOS
2 by knightbenax | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by knightbenax | 0 comments on Hacker News.
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