Nigeria No1. Music site And Complete Entertainment portal for Music Promotion WhatsApp:- +2349077287056
Tuesday, 9 July 2024
Show HN: Print Your Personalized Playing Cards with Only SVGs https://bit.ly/4eSaH2n
Show HN: Print Your Personalized Playing Cards with Only SVGs https://bit.ly/3xFFGht July 9, 2024 at 07:54AM
Monday, 8 July 2024
Show HN: I built a IMDB for all kinds of micro-creators https://bit.ly/3LjpCFf
Show HN: I built a IMDB for all kinds of micro-creators https://bit.ly/3VZ0sQW July 9, 2024 at 12:29AM
Show HN: Open-sourced Webflow for your own app https://bit.ly/3xDxyy1
Show HN: Open-sourced Webflow for your own app Hi HN, I’m Kiet, one of the creators of Onlook studio. I made this app that allows you to visually edit your locally running React app and write the code back to it in real-time. The purpose is to allow you to develop UI while fully owning your code the whole time. There are other visual builders out there but they either require you to upload your code to the cloud or some lengthy setup process. Onlook runs locally, deterministically, and only requires adding a plugin for the compile step (2 lines of config change). Technical details: This is technically a web browser that can point to your localhost, which injects some CSS into the page that allows you to select, drag, and drop DOM elements, then track and translate those changes back into React code. Theoretically, you could do this with any compiled framework but I wanted a reasonable scope for the launch (the first version was actually in Svelte). Some interesting challenges: 1. There is a React parser that is used to parse, insert the style, and serialize it back to code 2. There is a React pre-processor that traces the DOM elements to the corresponding code 3. There's also CSS parsing, injection, and converting to Tailwind 4. This is also an Electron app so there’s a browser within a browser within a node app which makes message passing… interesting What’s next? We’ve already built a proof-of-concept for inspecting and selecting layers, dragging to reorder, and inserting new DOM elements that I’m working on porting over from our private codebase. We’re also exploring opening more tabs in new frames in order to A/B test the changes before committing to code. There’s a long tail of exciting features we can do but I want to put this out there first and see what others would need. Let me know what you think/feedback. It's been a blast working on this so far and I think it’s just neat :) https://bit.ly/3LgUtSG July 8, 2024 at 01:36PM
Show HN: I made AI sales reps for live product demos https://bit.ly/3xRPhld
Show HN: I made AI sales reps for live product demos https://bit.ly/3XRZysc July 8, 2024 at 08:01AM
Sunday, 7 July 2024
Show HN: Io_uring like asynchronous API and coroutine powered IO tasks for Zig https://bit.ly/3Lcj3UO
Show HN: Io_uring like asynchronous API and coroutine powered IO tasks for Zig https://bit.ly/3xrY7WI July 8, 2024 at 03:55AM
Show HN: Simulating 20M Particles in JavaScript https://bit.ly/3S2IwDZ
Show HN: Simulating 20M Particles in JavaScript Had some fun with shared array buffers over many months of free time. Skip to the end to play around with the final app. Open to ideas on how to simulate more whilst staying in js land. https://bit.ly/4eRWW3I July 8, 2024 at 02:52AM
Show HN: Better Tmux – Customize Tmux Using React and JSX https://bit.ly/3XOBjv5
Show HN: Better Tmux – Customize Tmux Using React and JSX Hey folks! I'm working on something that's still in the early stages and a work in progress, but it seems promising. Don't hesitate to leave your honest feedback. https://bit.ly/4eRiRbg July 6, 2024 at 11:19PM
Saturday, 6 July 2024
Show HN: BeaconDB – An Alternative to Mozilla Location Services https://bit.ly/3WeYuMP
Show HN: BeaconDB – An Alternative to Mozilla Location Services https://bit.ly/3VVrvwF July 7, 2024 at 07:25AM
Show HN: I made a tool that automates competitor research for startups/hackers https://bit.ly/4eTV8qJ
Show HN: I made a tool that automates competitor research for startups/hackers Hi HN! After months of coding in my free time, I wanted to share Competitor Research [ https://bit.ly/3LgmOc2 ], a tool that helps you find and research your competitors. Problem: Most competitor analysis tools are 1. Time consuming: These tools get you the data, but you still have to do the work of knowing what to look for 2. Expensive: Most tools like Ahrefs, SEMRush cost $99+/month. Other more niche tools can cost $1000+/month. For enterprise software it can be $100K+, for consultants, it can be ~$2K+ 3. Requires you to know who your competitors are 4. Not comprehensive: Mostly provides only SEO related info/social media information 5. No actionable insights Solution: We tried our best to help startups/solopreneurs/makers get the best possible experience when researching their competitors. Here’s what we ended up making: 1. We help you find your competitors by combining several different sources and ranking the ones most relevant to your business. 2. We use multiple data sources and provide a comprehensive overview of your company: 1. SEO Keywords - what keywords do your competitors rank for 2. Backlinks - who’s linking to your competitors 3. Pricing - what your competitor’s pricing model is 4. Traffic - where they get traffic from 5. Website performance - how does your competitor’s website perform 6. Target audience and messaging 3. We provide you with actionable insights, things you can do to improve your business (get more customers, improve pricing, improve copy) 4. It’s a one time fee of $79, which is a steal compared to other tools Thanks a lot for reading through this :) We'd love to hear any feedback/comments you might have! Adam https://bit.ly/3LbuHzg July 6, 2024 at 08:12PM
Show HN: DecapBridge – Standalone Accounts for DecapCMS / NetlifyCMS https://bit.ly/4cunyWS
Show HN: DecapBridge – Standalone Accounts for DecapCMS / NetlifyCMS Hey folks! Any DecapCMS / NetlifyCMS users here? If so I've got something very niche for you guys: A "Standalone" (Github-free / Netlify-free) auth service for DecapCMS. Basically it let's you invite anyone with an email address to contribute to a Decap CMS site (without needing to create a github account). It came out of my own itch because I'm not on Netlify and asking non-devs to create a github account always felt a bit weird to me. Been working on it on and off for the past couple months and it's getting pretty stable now! Right now it only supports github and isn't deeply integrated with a github app (so you need to manually copy/paste a token) but I'm trying to see if it's something that interests people other than me before spending too much adding more features (see roadmap at the end of the homepage) I also plan on cleaning it up and providing a self-hosted version of it for those who prefer that. Thoughts / comments / ideas? If you try it out, let me know how it went! Thanks! https://bit.ly/4bO1rK1 July 6, 2024 at 01:30AM
Friday, 5 July 2024
Show HN: Tab vs. Space, vote for your empty space https://bit.ly/3RVKtC4
Show HN: Tab vs. Space, vote for your empty space Hello guys. I built a simple voting app Tab vs Space. I am using turso.tech (libsql) and Nuxt 3. I was planning to use websocket but it's just too complicated and just went with long-polling every 5 seconds to get the data and deploy it to cloudflare pages/worker. There is no need to login and also no IP tracking. I use installation id and save it to cookies, so basically you can clear cookies to get a new installation id. I don't know a better way to get unique user without being "intrusive" but if you have a better idea please do give one. You can check the source code here https://bit.ly/3RSrWXy Thank you https://bit.ly/3YaYb8n July 6, 2024 at 03:31AM
Thursday, 4 July 2024
Show HN: I made shopping clothes online easier https://bit.ly/3ztjeZf
Show HN: I made shopping clothes online easier Hey HN, A pattern I realized when I shopped for anything online is that by the end of my shopping session, I would accumulated over 15+ tabs. It's so easy to click on "Open in New Tab" that I figured other people have this issue as well. https://bit.ly/3ztjfMN July 5, 2024 at 01:47AM
Show HN: Winternet, modular blog/social media framework https://bit.ly/4byAVnJ
Show HN: Winternet, modular blog/social media framework https://bit.ly/4bmRvH2 July 5, 2024 at 01:04AM
Show HN: I use a RasperryPi to record electricity consumption/production at home https://bit.ly/3XNlbK7
Show HN: I use a RasperryPi to record electricity consumption/production at home https://bit.ly/3Y9q4xB July 4, 2024 at 08:08PM
Wednesday, 3 July 2024
Show HN: Clockech − The analytics platform for modern websites https://bit.ly/4f34m4n
Show HN: Clockech − The analytics platform for modern websites https://bit.ly/4cNvGla July 4, 2024 at 02:34AM
Show HN: Sonatino – small audio dev board based on ESP32-S3 https://bit.ly/3zue9zV
Show HN: Sonatino – small audio dev board based on ESP32-S3 Hi! My name is Ben, and I recently updated my audio dev board "Sonatino" after receiving a lot of good feedback from the initial launch a year ago. I began working on this after building a few projects that required audio capabilities. I was getting tired of wiring up external DACs and amplifiers to ESP32 boards, so I decided to look for a more compact, integrated solution. The available options either had larger footprints, non-standard connectors, or features that I didn't typically need for my projects. That's when I started working on a custom PCB that could be a sort of "audio swiss army knife". The result was Sonatino. Some have criticized the use of a DAC and ADC that support HD sample rates and bit depths, especially when other factors will limit the usefulness of anything over 44.1kHz/16-bit audio. I actually agree - HD audio in this context is mostly overkill, but most modern audio chips support it and it's entirely optional. My primary goal was for the ADC and DAC to be easy to use - no I2C configuration required (like many of the CODECs available). It needed to be easy to use from an Arduino programming environment. The chips I selected (from Cirrus Logic) were a good fit; they just also happened to support higher sample rates / bit depths. The latest revision drops the built-in antenna in favor of an external one. It also has a better speaker amp (3.2 W), an RGB LED, and improved power circuity. It's been a fun little board to work with! https://bit.ly/3VThf7Y Check it out and let me know if you have feedback. Price is currently higher than I'd like, but that's a result of it being manufactured at low volumes. July 1, 2024 at 09:07PM
Show HN: My real-time network packet traffic visualization tool https://bit.ly/4eMkcjz
Show HN: My real-time network packet traffic visualization tool https://bit.ly/4cN6DhT July 3, 2024 at 06:26PM
Show HN: Jb / json.bash – Command-line tool (and bash library) that creates JSON https://bit.ly/4cqxssA
Show HN: Jb / json.bash – Command-line tool (and bash library) that creates JSON jb is a UNIX tool that creates JSON, for shell scripts or interactive use. Its "one thing" is to get shell-native data (environment variables, files, program output) to somewhere else, using JSON encapsulate it robustly. I wrote this because I wanted a robust and ergonomic way to create ad-hoc JSON data from the command line and scripts. I wanted errors to not pass silently, not coerce data types, not put secrets into argv. I wanted to leverage shell features/patterns like process substitution, environment variables, reading/streaming from files and null-terminated data. If you know of the jo program, jb is similar, but type-safe by default and more flexible. jo coerces types, using flags like -n to coerce to a specific type (number for -n), without failing if the input is invalid. jb encodes values as strings by default, requiring type annotations to parse & encode values as a specific type (failing if the value is invalid). If you know jq, jb is complementary in that jq is great at transforming data already in JSON format, but it's fiddly to get non-JSON data into jq. In contrast, jb is good at getting unstructured data from arguments, environment variables and files into JSON (so that jq could use it), but jb cannot do any transformation of data, only parsing & encoding into JSON types. I feel rather guilty about having written this in bash. It's something of a boiled frog story. I started out just wanting to encode JSON strings from a shell script, without dependencies, with the intention of piping them into jq. After a few trials I was able to encode JSON strings in bash with surprising performance, using array operations to encode multiple strings at once. It grew from there into a complete tool. I'd certainly not choose bash if I was starting from scratch now... https://bit.ly/3zph1y1 July 3, 2024 at 11:18AM
Show HN: Faktor – The missing 2FA code autocomplete for Chrome https://bit.ly/3VNQ3aQ
Show HN: Faktor – The missing 2FA code autocomplete for Chrome Hi everyone, Kenneth here. As a loyal Chrome user, I was frustrated that one of Apple's most loved features from Safari and iOS wasn't available in Chrome. So, I built Faktor—a tool that grabs 2FA security codes from your iPhone and autofills them in Google Chrome on your Mac. Faktor is a native macOS app with a small Chrome extension, and once you install Faktor its easy to forget that this functionality isn't native to Chrome. Enjoy! https://bit.ly/3ztLWtb June 29, 2024 at 06:38PM
Tuesday, 2 July 2024
Show HN: Improve LLM Performance by Maximizing Iterative Development https://bit.ly/4cN3vT8
Show HN: Improve LLM Performance by Maximizing Iterative Development I have been working in AI space for a while now, first at FAANG with ML since 2021, then with LLM in start-ups since early 2023. I think LLM Application development is extremely iterative, more so than any other types of development. This is because to improve an LLM application performance (accuracy, hallucinations, latency, cost), you need to try various combinations of LLM models, prompt templates (e.g., few-shot, chain-of-thought), prompt context with different RAG architecture, different agent architecture, and more. There are thousands of possible combinations and you need a process that let’s you quickly test and evaluate these different combinations. I have had the chance to talk with many companies working on AI products. The biggest mistake I see is a lack of standard process that allows them to rapidly iterate towards their performance goal. Using my learnings, I’m working on an Open Source Framework that structures your application development for rapid iteration so you can easily test different combination of your LLM application components and quickly iterate towards your accuracy goals. You can checkout the project at https://bit.ly/3xHAzx4 You can locally setup a complete LLM Chat App with us with a single command. Stars are always appreciated! Would love any feedback or your thoughts around LLM Development. https://bit.ly/3xHAzx4 July 3, 2024 at 02:52AM
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)