Wednesday, 5 October 2022

Show HN: I unlocked reaching 10.000 real potential customers as low cost as $50 https://bit.ly/3SF9XSu

Show HN: I unlocked reaching 10.000 real potential customers as low cost as $50 As a founder without an audience, building great products is no longer enough. It is difficult to find first paying users, grow, and discover where and how to reach them. You have to find the right people through the noise. As a founder who likes to break the rules, I discovered a method. I unlocked reaching 10.000+ real potential customers as low cost as $50 with 90% successful targeting. Solution: Twitter custom audience lists. This is the Holy Grail. you can turn it into a lead generating machine by using custom audience list. Twitter lets you use lists to target. But there is more important. For this, it does not ask for private information such as e-mail. Only twitter handles (i.e. usernames) You just need to have a list where you have Twitter handles. If you are willing to take some time, collect the handles (usernames) of your potential customers. Or use our createtargetaudience.com tool, which searches and lists according to job title or interest written in the profile bio. E.g; If you have a product for developers, list the people who write developer, software in their profile. If you have a web3 or NFT community, people who write web3, NFT on their profile. or marketers, designers, founders, no-coders, investors, SaaS, etc. You can get your list in CSV format. By uploading your list to Twitter ads, you target only the people you want. So no wasted. And you know who you're showing the ad to. %90 successful targeting. You will be surprised at the engagement and conversion rate with very low costs. (over 30% for me) Cost = €5 / $6.5 per 1000 impressions. You can know how much you will spend based on the size of your list. If your target audience includes a job title or interest, it's worth a try. October 5, 2022 at 10:17AM

Tuesday, 4 October 2022

Show HN: Cape: Serverless Confidential Computing https://bit.ly/3C9fav5

Show HN: Cape: Serverless Confidential Computing Cape is a serverless platform for deploying functions to secure enclaves. Our mission is to give every developer a simple way to build secure apps that respect end-user privacy through encryption and confidential computing. Cape is built on AWS Nitro Enclaves, which are isolated VMs carved out by EC2's Nitro Hypervisor. They have no network, no storage, and no interactive access (such as a shell). So effectively, no one can see what the enclave is doing. The way Cape uses Nitro Enclaves is unique, as we add a number of security, scale, and ease of use features for developers. Cape has three main features: - `cape encrypt`: Encrypts data that can only be processed by your functions within Cape's secure enclave. - `cape deploy`: Deploy your encrypted functions to Cape (anything from simple scripts to machine learning pipelines). - `cape run`: Run your functions on the encrypted data, keeping your functions and the data confidential. How did we get here? Four years ago we launched a project called TF Encrypted, which is framework for running Tensorflow on encrypted data. TFE is based on secure multi-party computation. It's popular with cryptographers and machine learning engineers doing research on secure computation protocols applied to neural networks. Our work with TFE inspired us to think about developers and the tools they have to build secure apps that can protect the confidentiality of their end-user's data. I believe that developer's want to do right by their users, they often just don't have the time or the resources. Security and privacy features tend to fall off of the priority list, unfortunately. We hope Cape can help usher in a new era of secure, privacy-focused apps by making confidential computing accessible to the average developer. I'll leave it at that for now. Please reach out if you have any questions. The open beta of Cape is currently free. You can signup and run your first function within a few minutes. https://bit.ly/3Ei1znV October 4, 2022 at 06:42PM

Show HN: I made an app that monitors (all) your Raspberry Pi effortlessly https://bit.ly/3STWFkR

Show HN: I made an app that monitors (all) your Raspberry Pi effortlessly https://bit.ly/3RB3pmN October 4, 2022 at 06:01PM

Show HN: Let the computer be your unique t-shirt designer with Stable Diffusion https://bit.ly/3rvxnOs

Show HN: Let the computer be your unique t-shirt designer with Stable Diffusion https://bit.ly/3EePJuA October 4, 2022 at 05:11PM

Show HN: Our Careers page helps you find a career (even when we're not hiring) https://bit.ly/3yan9Xx

Show HN: Our Careers page helps you find a career (even when we're not hiring) We just launched a new site and we did a few things differently. We added a /credits page to acknowledge the people behind the commits, made some of our internal wiki public, and more, but the thing I'm most proud of is our Careers page. The Careers page for most sites, especially now, is usually posturing. Many companies have frozen hiring, but they're "collecting resumes" to keep up appearances. You clicked the page to find a Career, so our goal should be help you find one. I haven't seen other sites do this yet, how can we improve it? https://bit.ly/3SC2VOA October 4, 2022 at 04:39PM

Show HN: Bare is a Google Reader for tweets that look like blog posts https://bit.ly/3RB3erJ

Show HN: Bare is a Google Reader for tweets that look like blog posts I first submitted BARE here about a year ago. Since then, a lot of people signed up for our tiny side project. Enough to say that it is well past breaking even! We tried many ideas, and ultimately settled on the simple design and the RSS output by default. It is incredible how many people still use RSS nowadays. Thanks to all of you! Below is the original Show HN post from last year: BARE grew out of the idea to reduce one's Twitter timeline to bare tweets - blog-post-like writings devoid of media, links, hashtags, or any social interaction mechanics. Once you sign up with BARE, it will continuously check your Twitter timeline and only show you the long-form text-based tweets in it. Like a good old blog reader. But why do that, you may ask? What's the point? Because, we believe that this is one of the easiest ways to discover people's true personality, beneath the chatter and social media clickbait. It is also a naturally distraction-free method to keep oneself concentrated over the content without the urge to skim and keep scrolling down. One of the easiest ways to evoke concentration is to reduce the sources of distraction. Is anybody actually writing such tweets? A lot of people. Check the tiny portion we follow here: https://bit.ly/3FRLoeA and discover the ones in your timeline by signing up. https://bit.ly/3FRLoeA October 4, 2022 at 03:55PM

Show HN: Generate code and diagrams from live infrastructure, AWS/Azure/GCP https://bit.ly/3M3d5VU

Show HN: Generate code and diagrams from live infrastructure, AWS/Azure/GCP https://bit.ly/3fJWudu October 4, 2022 at 02:03PM

Show HN: A macOS app to search for CLI commands quickly https://bit.ly/3Efig37

Show HN: A macOS app to search for CLI commands quickly https://bit.ly/3Cdio0G October 4, 2022 at 04:16AM

Monday, 3 October 2022

Show HN: https://bit.ly/3rtpqt6 https://bit.ly/3EeDuOM

Show HN: https://bit.ly/3rtpqt6 https://bit.ly/3rtpqt6 October 4, 2022 at 03:07AM

Show HN: I finished v5 of a JVM framework I've spent spent half a decade making https://bit.ly/3y9VzcI

Show HN: I finished v5 of a JVM framework I've spent spent half a decade making https://bit.ly/3rrlaug October 3, 2022 at 03:30PM

Show HN: Pure Go Opus Audio Codec implementation https://bit.ly/3UZS3eQ

Show HN: Pure Go Opus Audio Codec implementation https://bit.ly/3ye31nj October 3, 2022 at 01:25PM

Show HN: Free Stable Diffusion discord bot, accepts crypto for heavy use https://bit.ly/3rr9VSk

Show HN: Free Stable Diffusion discord bot, accepts crypto for heavy use https://bit.ly/3rqtLgx October 3, 2022 at 03:29PM

Show HN: Postgres WASM https://bit.ly/3rnl5ro

Show HN: Postgres WASM https://bit.ly/3CqsL2e October 3, 2022 at 03:25PM

Show HN: I wrote a book about overcoming the Metacrisis https://bit.ly/3UWWE1v

Show HN: I wrote a book about overcoming the Metacrisis Hey HN! Recently published a book developing new frameworks of meaning and value informed by our most advanced cosmology and physics. It makes the argument for the necessity of spiritual revolution in order to free the abundance trapped in the world, a reimagination that interlinks the spiritual project to systemic reformation. The inspiration for the text draws from my history of social impact work and the frustrations and lessons learned along the way. If it's of interest you can learn more/read it/download it in a variety of formats for free at https://bit.ly/3C1ZQA7. October 3, 2022 at 02:31PM

Show HN: Click on a component (React,) in browser to get to its code in IDE https://bit.ly/3dYG6FQ

Show HN: Click on a component (React,) in browser to get to its code in IDE Hi all! Here is my open-source side-project. It is a browser extension that lets you click on a component on your localhost to get to its code in your editor. It works with React, Svelte, SolidJS, Preact, and Vue components and with VSCode, Webstorm, or any other editor that supports URL protocol links. It can be used also as JavaScript library (instead of installing browser extension) It speeds up my web development so much that I can't work without that anymore :D Let me know if you like it or if you would like to improve it somehow. Contributions are welcomed https://bit.ly/3EtgFaj https://bit.ly/3E75GmC https://bit.ly/3EtgFaj October 3, 2022 at 12:06PM

Show HN: We designed and implemented graph projection feature https://bit.ly/3rndgSq

Show HN: We designed and implemented graph projection feature Hi all! I'm one of the developers that were working on this project for some time. In recent months, users started to ask us more frequently about the ability to run algorithms on a part of graph stored in database - subgraph. Now to do this, we extended the implementation of C API we had and brought to you the graph project feature that enables running algorithms on a specific subset of a graph stored in the database. You can now do graph analysis with PageRank, degree centrality, betweenness centrality, or any other algorithm on subgraphs without any additional adjustments. Before you had to create new query procedure. You can fire up a graph machine learning algorithm, such as Temporal graph networks and split the dataset inside the query to do training and validation without splitting the dataset programmatically. And last but not least, you can use your graphics card to run one of cuGraph's algorithms on subgraph in terms of seconds. You can find the whole explanation in blog post [1] and you can checkout the code at Memgraph GitHub [2]. Furthermore you can check cuGraph's algorithms we have integrated [3] I'd like to hear your feedback on our approach. Also if you have any general feedback, just write it in the comments :) [1] https://bit.ly/3rrA0AU... [2] https://bit.ly/3UZyp2w [3] https://bit.ly/3UXwlIr October 3, 2022 at 10:22AM

Show HN: Can I DevTools? https://bit.ly/3rqkXY0

Show HN: Can I DevTools? https://bit.ly/3LZN6i2 October 3, 2022 at 08:10AM

Sunday, 2 October 2022

Show HN: mvSQLite v0.2 https://bit.ly/3RzxKlA

Show HN: mvSQLite v0.2 Hello HN! Today I published the v0.2 release of mvSQLite, the open-source SQLite-compatible distributed database built on FoundationDB. This release has gone through a few months of testing, benchmarking and dogfooding since v0.1 and is the first stable and performant production-ready version. https://bit.ly/3UO9gYC October 2, 2022 at 12:53PM

Show HN: FocusedEdit – a classic Macintosh to web browser shared text editor https://bit.ly/3BUqx9O

Show HN: FocusedEdit – a classic Macintosh to web browser shared text editor I built a classic Macintosh text editor that allows users to do shared bidirection live editing with a web browser on a modern computer. Essentially it allows allows you to really quickly and easily share and edit text snippets on a classic Macintosh. I've tested the software on System 2.0 through System 7.6.1, but it should work on all PPC and 68k Macintoshes running up to MacOS 9.2.2 assuming they have a modem serial port available. In addition to the github repository, I wrote up a blog post here: https://bit.ly/3y8PhdF... outlining how to get up and running. Both the repo and the blog post have a demo gif to help explain exactly what FocusedEdit does as well as how it works. If you have any questions or decide to try it out on your Macintosh or in an emulator, let me know! I'd love to hear about it! https://bit.ly/3y8IKzx October 2, 2022 at 03:30PM

Show HN: I made a productivity tool instead of being productive https://bit.ly/3Crsdt0

Show HN: I made a productivity tool instead of being productive https://bit.ly/3Ecy86I October 2, 2022 at 02:22PM