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Saturday, 14 January 2023
Show HN: Ailice – This model does not exist https://bit.ly/3QJu2Hu
Show HN: Ailice – This model does not exist Hey HN, meet Ailice. She doesn't exist — she was created using multiple AIs as a crowdsourcing experiment. Help pick her best photos — the most popular ones will be posted on her Instagram. → https://bit.ly/3w5fPLm https://bit.ly/3w4rqdv January 15, 2023 at 03:08AM
Show HN: Robyn – the fastest Python web framework written in Rust https://bit.ly/3WaDbKc
Show HN: Robyn – the fastest Python web framework written in Rust https://bit.ly/3iCZzxV January 14, 2023 at 11:53PM
Show HN: RecoverPy 2.0: Recover deleted or overwritten files from your terminal https://bit.ly/3W6Loix
Show HN: RecoverPy 2.0: Recover deleted or overwritten files from your terminal Repo: https://bit.ly/3COITu9 Hi! I just released RecoverPy version 2.0.0 and wanted to share it with you. RecoverPy is a tool with Terminal User Interface to recover deleted and/or overwritten data from your terminal. Version 1.0.0 was released probably around 2 years ago and I was quite amazed by how popular it got :) The initial audience was people trying to recover lost files, but it stuck with hacking/forensics community, I even got to receive mails to appear in hacking magazines and blogs. That was quite unanticipated but I'm glad it's useful to other people :) I got the idea when I was a noobie coder and, among other flaws, didn't use any VC. I worked all day long on a script when instead of outputting my script execution to a file I... output my log file content into my script file, then bam, my script was gone. I searched for solutions to recover it, the thing is it was not just "deleted", the file was still present, but its content has been overwritten. So after some research, I found it was possible to recover it with mostly a combination of grep and dd. RecoverPy is just that, it uses grep and dd under the hood and eases the whole process. So in the past few weeks (a few hours during past weekends) I worked on an entire TUI framework switch. Previously I used a dated, unmaintained Python TUI framework, finding a sexy and fresh one was quite difficult when I started the project :/ But months ago I saw the textual project and was amazed by the result. I was only waiting for some widgets to be available (I didn't want to reinvent to wheel) to jump into it. Textual is just amazing honestly and I can only recommend it if you need a Python TUI framework. I'd be happy to hear any feedback, issue, bug, etc. RecoverPy worked quite well on previous version, 1.5.2, the heavy rework may have introduced some new bugs. Furthermore, if you want to contribute you're also more than welcome! RecoverPy code is quite simple and textual TUI framework enables a modern asyncio workflow and I think, is a good playground if you want to step up. https://bit.ly/3COITu9 January 14, 2023 at 04:32PM
Show HN: Minesweeper on a chess board with chess pieces as mines https://bit.ly/3ZzmNpj
Show HN: Minesweeper on a chess board with chess pieces as mines rearrange the chess pieces so that the number of pieces threatening each square matches the large number in that square? pieces move freely https://bit.ly/3QHWaul January 14, 2023 at 06:42PM
Show HN: Kody Tools – I developed 300 tools in 6 months https://bit.ly/3QDYXog
Show HN: Kody Tools – I developed 300 tools in 6 months This is just a side hustle but I ended developing 300+ tools. Any feedback or suggestion is welcome. https://bit.ly/3GI1OIl January 14, 2023 at 06:15PM
Show HN: Tweet Spear – Accurate replies to boost your Twitter engagement https://bit.ly/3IOWzta
Show HN: Tweet Spear – Accurate replies to boost your Twitter engagement https://bit.ly/3iBgOjl January 14, 2023 at 07:56AM
Show HN: Building a public domain print-at-home newspaper using Scroll https://bit.ly/3GAQttA
Show HN: Building a public domain print-at-home newspaper using Scroll https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6a-QyXYKOYw January 14, 2023 at 12:19PM
Show HN: Made a GPT-3 powered Chrome extension to explain code anywhere https://bit.ly/3kfz8Px
Show HN: Made a GPT-3 powered Chrome extension to explain code anywhere https://bit.ly/3W576U0 January 14, 2023 at 07:33AM
Friday, 13 January 2023
Show HN: Use predictive modeling to win your bracket competition https://bit.ly/3QIsvkW
Show HN: Use predictive modeling to win your bracket competition Hi! I made this as a side project this week to submit a bracket for our friends' NFL playoff bracket competition. It is all html and vanilla JS, runs directly in the browser, and is pretty fun to take for a spin. Obviously it is far from polished - that might have to wait for next year! https://bit.ly/3WaeddK January 14, 2023 at 03:46AM
Show HN: A pen that digitizes handwriting on any paper https://bit.ly/3ZxZg8k
Show HN: A pen that digitizes handwriting on any paper Our team has been working on Nuwa Pen for a while, and we're excited to share that we are in pre-order. The reception at CES was amazing, so I thought I'd share it with you too. https://tcrn.ch/3WbzmnM January 13, 2023 at 04:31PM
Show HN: An AI Assistant for Obsidian https://bit.ly/3ZqT1mC
Show HN: An AI Assistant for Obsidian https://bit.ly/3UlJhr1 January 13, 2023 at 09:59AM
Show HN: Golang Configuration Library https://bit.ly/3GBlX2N
Show HN: Golang Configuration Library https://bit.ly/3WdOnFM January 13, 2023 at 08:08AM
Thursday, 12 January 2023
Show HN: HandCalc – A modern tool for building engineering calcs https://bit.ly/3GXChwa
Show HN: HandCalc – A modern tool for building engineering calcs https://bit.ly/3kfhEm3 January 12, 2023 at 09:20PM
Show HN: Collaborative live-coding MIDI sequencers in JavaScript https://bit.ly/3ZtzCBA
Show HN: Collaborative live-coding MIDI sequencers in JavaScript https://bit.ly/3iFth5n January 12, 2023 at 07:04PM
Show HN: WunderGraph – The simplicity of RPC with the power of GraphQL https://bit.ly/3vVqqsf
Show HN: WunderGraph – The simplicity of RPC with the power of GraphQL https://bit.ly/3iyUkiN January 12, 2023 at 04:33PM
Show HN: Use ChatGPT and Excel to get superpowers https://bit.ly/3IHDpVQ
Show HN: Use ChatGPT and Excel to get superpowers During my winter holiday I played with ChatGPT and built an integration with the OpenAI Completion APIs and Excel. (And yes technically not ChatGPT but as close that we can get with the APIs that are available.) I found this incredible useful for my work on Filestar. I wrote some instructions here on how to try this yourself: https://bit.ly/3Wa01RY... Please let me know if you figure out any useful prompts. https://bit.ly/3CE2Tj1 January 12, 2023 at 09:13AM
Show HN: SheetHub – Turn your Excel formulas into APIs https://bit.ly/3XmMtng
Show HN: SheetHub – Turn your Excel formulas into APIs https://bit.ly/3Xr6I3i January 12, 2023 at 11:02AM
Show HN: Basti – connect to AWS DBs with no idle cost. No SSH keys. IAM-driven https://bit.ly/3XljEaQ
Show HN: Basti – connect to AWS DBs with no idle cost. No SSH keys. IAM-driven https://bit.ly/3iziJ7O January 12, 2023 at 11:34AM
Wednesday, 11 January 2023
Show HN: Fern, a language for defining REST APIs that compiles into OpenAPI https://bit.ly/3VYdYm4
Show HN: Fern, a language for defining REST APIs that compiles into OpenAPI Hi HN, this is Danny, Deep, and Zach. We built Fern after our previous ed tech startup failed. We were frustrated with how much time we spent writing “API code” instead of working on the actual product. We tried to use OpenAPI but we were underwhelmed - the generated code wasn’t idiomatic and it still required manual work (custom templates, scripts, manually publishing SDKs to registries). The Fern compiler takes your API as input and invokes generators that output things like: SDKs, server code, a Postman collection, and an OpenAPI spec. Some technical highlights about the compiler + generators: - The compiler (available as a CLI) handles syntactic + semantic validation. It also includes a linter that encodes best practices. If your API Definition compiles, you can have high confidence that the SDKs will generate correctly. - After all the parsing and validation, the compiler outputs an intermediate representation that gets handed off to the generators. This prevents each generator from re-implementing the same parsing and validation logic. - Each generator is implemented in the language it is targeting - e.g. the Python generators are written in Python, the TypeScript generators are written in TS. It makes the SDKs more idiomatic because every programming language generally has the best tooling/libraries for generating code in itself. We also think it’ll make community involvement + contribution easier. - The generators can output the code to disk, but also push the code to a Github repo and publish the SDK directly to registries (e.g. npm, Maven). We are looking for devs to use Fern for API development. If you have any feedback about the process, compiler, or the generated code, we’d love to hear it. "Plant Store" example: https://bit.ly/3X5QUTQ Generated repos: - https://bit.ly/3X2W7LX - https://bit.ly/3X2Z7I9 - https://bit.ly/3QzJhT9 - https://bit.ly/3IHEXPD https://bit.ly/3Qwza1e January 12, 2023 at 12:09AM
Show HN: Tagging Assistant – add AWS cost allocation tags in your dev pipeline https://bit.ly/3kbmhO0
Show HN: Tagging Assistant – add AWS cost allocation tags in your dev pipeline Hi HN! My name is Ilia. I'm here with my co-founders Thomas and Daniele to share our new feature, Tagging Assistant. AWS Cost Allocation Tags are labels on resources that attribute and track cloud costs. Tagging is a prerequisite to assigning cost ownership (e.g. by team/app/cost center) and creating cloud cost accountability. Tagging AWS resources is a manual process that’s done either when a resource is spun up or during a cost firefighting initiative to understand cost ownership. We figured there had to be a better way and set out to make tagging a seamless part of development pipelines that use GitHub and Terraform. Once set up, the Tagging Assistant GitHub action will allow you to continuously enforce and maintain your AWS tagging strategy within your Terraform projects. Each GitHub repository can be associated with a catalog key that maps to tag key-value pairs within the Tag Catalog on the Cloudthread App. Adding or changing tag key-value pairs in a Cloudthread’s Tag Catalog entry will generate a tagging update Pull Request each time the action runs, and fail if the appropriate tagging is not in place. An example of such an update is `.tf` build file getting `(locals {tags = …}})` added. All resources defined via Terraform in the repository will receive the same tags defined via the Tag Catalog. This is just the start – in the future we’ll create more tagging granularity so that it is possible to tag different provider aliases differently within a single project. A graphic showing how this works is here: https://bit.ly/3kbmi4w Tagging Assistant is free to use and instructions to set it up are in our docs below. https://bit.ly/3kbmjW8 By installing Tagging Assistant you’ll get access to the free version of Cloudthread’s cost visibility, savings insights, and unit economics features. Very excited to get feedback! Try it out, let us know what you think, and feel free to reach out directly to hey@cloudthread.io or by using the chat icon bottom right on the Cloudthread app. https://bit.ly/3W2WHIk January 11, 2023 at 05:05PM
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