19 comments

  • kirubakaran a minute ago

    [delayed]

  • AznHisoka a minute ago

    I am building Bloomberry (https://bloomberry.com), an alternative to tools like BuiltWith/Wappalyzer to provide sales signals when companies subscribe or churn from over 1600 B2B tech products. Think backend/backoffice tools like Hubspot CRM, or Netsuite, or Microsoft 365, rather than frontend technologies like Wordpress or React.

  • winterbourne 3 minutes ago

    https://buildthreads.com/

    Aggregator for new posts in build threads from 277 old-school DIY forums.

    Build threads of people building cars, 4x4s, motorcycles, boats, airplanes, hot rods, musical instruments, etc.

  • drdolitre a minute ago

    Needed seating planner to organize my wedding, came up with something that suits my needs

    https://easywed.app

  • Luyanda 4 minutes ago

    I am working on this Review Flow. An extention for Cursor / VScode to enable IDE as first class for code reviews.

    It came from a frustration that I needed to switch between the browser and the IDE to navigate through the code and leaving comments on Gitlab at the company.

    So I thought it could useful to create something and let it be accessible to the public as open source.

    link: https://github.com/LuyandaLia/reviewflow

    In a nutshell, it accepts draft comments, which can be modified and submitted.

    It auto configs the env for Python as it uses FastAPI for calls to Gitlab.

    It's my initial attempt. Suggestions, reviews, contributions are invited.

    One love

  • kown7 2 minutes ago

    Trying to summarize my career advice reading: https://www.nordstroem.ch/posts/2026-07-12-collected-career-...

    Open to feedback and missing pieces.

  • thegagne 7 minutes ago

    Used Claude to write conformance tests for https://aep.dev.

    https://github.com/thegagne/aep-conformance-test

    Did pretty well, only took a day or so. I first had it inventory every MUST, SHOULD, and MAY in the spec, and then let it rip. I did guide it quite a bit to get what I wanted, but at the end I’m pretty happy with it as a first draft.

    Helped me learn the spec and will be helpful to hone my dotnet AEP server, and aepbase.

    There already existed an aep e2e validator which does a similar thing, but this is more thorough and generates a nice report. It will tell you not just whether your API follows the spec, but also what parts of the spec it does not implement.

  • primaprashant 3 minutes ago

    Continuing my newsletter about agentic coding:

    https://www.agenticcodingweekly.com/

  • Keloran 3 minutes ago

    This month I have mainly been building my fork of tiny-dfr so that my 2019 mbp touchbar isn’t useless when on hyprland/cosmic

  • SPascareli13 10 minutes ago

    Just trying to learn C again, making things from scratch in a multiplatform way, interfacing with X11 on Linux and wasm on the browser.

    It's been fun dealing with memory and C's weird design in this age of agentic coding.

  • drdolitre 2 minutes ago

    needed seating planner for my wedding, so created something that suits my needs

    https://easywed.app

  • sp1982 5 minutes ago

    https://corvi.careers/ Adding salary visibility for U.S and improving job search

  • ttrashh 8 minutes ago

    https://flipcompare.com

    Realize that I'm really bad at marketing. Trying to work on it.

    It lets you take a picture of video games and shows price comparisons for the major buy lists.

  • mertbio 8 minutes ago

    I’m working on improving the apps I developed for iOS by adding new features and fixing the bugs: https://fruitfulapps.com/

  • stuartmemo 8 minutes ago

    Still plugging away on Raygum. Think Letterboxd for music.

    https://raygum.com

  • notorandit 6 minutes ago

    RV64 toy/hobby kernel. No compatibility aim but rather at efficiency and speed.

  • asaddhamani 8 minutes ago

    I’ve been building a shared memory layer across all AI tools

    www.memoryplugin.com

  • enraged_camel 2 minutes ago

    I've been climbing for a decade, but over the past 3 years I've put on a bunch of weight due to work and certain life events. But I want to change that.

    I know what motivates me: seeing progress. The feedback loop of "do X, see Y gain" is what keeps me going.

    So I started building an integrated dashboard that can aggregate data from multiple systems:

    - My digital scale

    - Apple Watch (sleep + running performance)

    - Beastmaker Motherboard, which is an electronic board that you attach a hangboard to and it shows you various stats like how much force you're applying

    The idea is that every morning I'll open the dashboard and be able to see exactly how much progress I've made the previous day: weight loss, strength gain, cardio performance.

    It's an interesting problem. There's essentially two parts to it: Apple Health, which aggregates data from the scale and the Apple Watch and can POST-export it hourly, and the electronic board, which sends data via BLE in real time. The destination for both of these will probably be an always-on Raspberry Pi 5, but I haven't decided yet. Then I'll have a small server app that can pull the data from the Pi and draw some fancy charts.

  • onesandofgrain 9 minutes ago

    I was working on sharemygit.com

    However, LLM coding has made coding less rewarding so… Im thinking about starting a new hobby as coding for fun has become prompting.