Show HN: I’ve made 10 Telegram channels where juniors can find remote jobs https://twitter.com/xoelipedes/status/1359465041985175552 February 10, 2021 at 03:35AM
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(https://ift.tt/3rEboCNfrankie(n) released a new track entitled That girl - frankie(n) which is also on Spotify.It's about a lady who is so cute and attractiv...
Show HN: I’ve made 10 Telegram channels where juniors can find remote jobs https://twitter.com/xoelipedes/status/1359465041985175552 February 10, 2021 at 03:35AM
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(https://ift.tt/3rEboCNShow HN: I built an internet speed analytics tool https://ift.tt/3cRFG0X February 8, 2021 at 10:56AM
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(https://ift.tt/3p7ycJFShow HN: Start working remotely is a job search I built using V https://ift.tt/37gRy9h February 9, 2021 at 10:27PM
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(https://ift.tt/3jzcaOTShow HN: How you got your first 10 users for your product? We are all building some kind of product or business and gaining the initial set of users can be a difficult task. They are not only the users, but they play a very big role as they believed in your product, they should provide the non-biased review about your product and that will define how you’ll shape your product. So, I would be grateful if you can share the process of getting your initial set of users. By this, we’ll learn from each other’s experience, we’ll appreciate each other’s effort and help out the maker who need help with their initial set of users. Comment below the strategies If you want to discuss with me, then you can connect with me through Twitter: @ujjwal_sukheja February 9, 2021 at 08:58PM
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(https://ift.tt/3p4ZhNGShow HN: Start working remotely is a job search I built using V https://ift.tt/37gRy9h February 9, 2021 at 10:27PM
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(https://ift.tt/3q7OvYgShow HN: How you got your first 10 users for your product? We are all building some kind of product or business and gaining the initial set of users can be a difficult task. They are not only the users, but they play a very big role as they believed in your product, they should provide the non-biased review about your product and that will define how you’ll shape your product. So, I would be grateful if you can share the process of getting your initial set of users. By this, we’ll learn from each other’s experience, we’ll appreciate each other’s effort and help out the maker who need help with their initial set of users. Comment below the strategies If you want to discuss with me, then you can connect with me through Twitter: @ujjwal_sukheja February 9, 2021 at 08:58PM
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(https://ift.tt/3a5rmA4Show HN: FINT, more than just a gRPC Test Client https://ift.tt/3jE88oj February 9, 2021 at 02:22AM
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(https://ift.tt/3p4acqWShow HN: A strongly typed XML reader based on XPath for JVM https://ift.tt/3aPrYsG February 9, 2021 at 01:35AM
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(https://ift.tt/3jFKx6QShow HN: PHP Laravel logging and payload in the same format https://ift.tt/2BzLk73 February 8, 2021 at 09:51PM
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(https://ift.tt/3q90xAKShow HN: Kloudi – Locally-hosted universal CLI https://kloudi.tech February 7, 2021 at 10:37PM
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(https://ift.tt/2YXsIqlShow HN: A fast JSON library for Go https://ift.tt/3ilDWN1 February 8, 2021 at 04:58AM
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(https://ift.tt/3qi27ApShow HN: Kloudi – Locally-hosted universal CLI https://kloudi.tech February 7, 2021 at 10:37PM
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(https://ift.tt/2NaW8yAShow HN: A fast JSON library for Go https://ift.tt/3ilDWN1 February 8, 2021 at 04:58AM
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(https://ift.tt/36Va5rgShow HN: That $100 you didn’t invest in Bitcoin because they said so https://ift.tt/2Z0nauZ February 8, 2021 at 04:11PM
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(https://ift.tt/2MMva0gShow HN: InstaRoom turns your iPhone into a smart webcam https://instaroom.me/ February 8, 2021 at 02:06PM
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(https://ift.tt/3tNWNH9Show HN: That $100 you didn’t invest in Bitcoin because they said so https://ift.tt/2Z0nauZ February 8, 2021 at 04:11PM
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(https://ift.tt/2OlNSfJShow HN: InstaRoom turns your iPhone into a smart webcam https://instaroom.me/ February 8, 2021 at 02:06PM
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(https://ift.tt/3tEKCvULaunch HN: Jiga (YC W21) – Faster custom parts for hardware products Hi HN! It’s Assaf and I’m the co-founder of Jiga ( https://app.jiga3d.com ). We make it fast and easy to produce parts for hardware products. You can upload a 3D model (such as STL or SLDPRT) file and get a production quote within seconds. We have a vetted network of manufacturers around the world who can produce your part with 3D printing (plastic and metal), CNC machining (plastic and metal), or sheet metal. It’s literally 3 clicks: 1. upload your file on https://app.jiga3d.com . 2. select manufacturing process 3. select quote and order. We built this because we are hardware makers ourselves. I was running a 3D printing manufacturing service before starting Jiga, and we were shocked by how bad an experience it was to get quotes and order parts online, or from machine shops. I spent a significant amount of my time and money on inefficient communication, paperwork, sourcing and quoting. Ok, so now you’re probably asking how we’re different from other online manufacturing companies? Well, besides being not as fast, they act as an unnecessary middleman. They cut a huge fee, block hardware builders from talking directly to manufacturers and getting professional feedback (such as making sure they can produce that 0.15mm tolerance exactly on that little hole). For examples, take some of our customers: an enterprise that builds jets for the US army, a company that builds a device that enables tractors to be autonomous, a hospital that builds 3D printed ventilation machines to tackle Covid-19 (first parts ordered with Jiga!) or a company that builds robotic arms. These companies start by looking for the right supplier to make their part. They email quote requests with the designs, some suppliers reply after a week, some don’t. They log this data into spreadsheets and folders while making comparisons. Finally after two weeks the supplier is ready to take your order but oh no! They mixed up the email threads and made a mistake – and the wrong part was produced. Worse, when getting into producing more than just prototypes, they have to manage the supply of many different components and timelines, making sure that that they won’t find themselves delaying over some little component and avoiding any miscommunication about parts or revisions. All this inefficiency is not only frustrating but also costly – makers and companies lose millions every year because of miscommunication and delays. We built Jiga to make this process efficient and painless. We handle all logistics (always first class/priority shipping) and make sure that customers are 100% happy with every order that they get. Additionally, we let you read supplier reviews, check their certifications and communicate directly with them. Want to make sure that the supplier is aware of that 0.15mm hole? No problem, reach to them over our platform and they will answer promptly. We make money from commissions on orders based on agreements with suppliers. I’m looking forward to talking to anyone who builds hardware, and to hearing your feedback and ideas and experiences in this space. If you’ve ever needed parts for things you were making, I hope you’ll give us a spin. Have at it, HN! February 8, 2021 at 08:03AM
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(https://ift.tt/3a0PX9fShow HN: A PC Gamepad Adapter for Path of Exile I Built in Golang https://ift.tt/3rBTwIG February 8, 2021 at 07:06AM
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(https://ift.tt/3cRFEpRShow HN: Online Code Diffchecker https://ift.tt/3ty26dD February 8, 2021 at 04:36AM
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(https://ift.tt/2YWGoldLaunch HN: Infracost (YC W21) – open-source cloud cost estimator Hi, we’re Ali, Hassan and Alistair and we co-founded Infracost ( https://ift.tt/3pZI5dK ). Infracost is an open-source cloud cost estimator for your pull requests. When you change your infrastructure code (Terraform), Infracost posts a comment in the pull request, which tells you the impact of this change to your cloud bill, e.g. “this will increase your bill by 25% next month”. Existing cloud cost management products focus on post-bill analysis and target finance and management teams via charting dashboards. We built one of these back in 2013. They are all missing an important piece – the people who are responsible for purchasing cloud resources are not shown costs upfront, so they don’t know how much the resources will cost before launching them. We want to make cloud costs simpler to understand for developers and DevOps so they can make better decisions, which we believe will lead to more cost-efficient systems. In 2011 Ali and Hassan started a cloud cost forecasting company based on Ali’s PhD research. They applied to YC and got through to the interview round. RightScale acquired them in 2012. I read about their YC interview experience on HN, reached out and ended up joining them. We went on to form the team that built RightScale’s cloud cost management product (now called Flexera Optima). In our most recent startup (which failed) we were launching cloud stacks for users on-demand and we wanted a way to work out the cost of each. We hacked together something by building a GraphQL-based cloud pricing API and a CLI that parsed our Terraform code and output a cost breakdown. We released the code on GitHub as Infracost and discovered that others had similar problems. We got requests to support more cloud services and integrate it into pull requests. At the moment, Infracost supports Terraform for AWS and Google Cloud (we’re adding new resources every week). It can be integrated into GitHub, GitLab, CircleCI, Bitbucket and Atlantis, or can be used anywhere through the CLI. In the future we plan to add support for more cloud vendors and infrastructure-as-code tools (Azure, CloudFormation, Pulumi, etc). We now spend a lot of our days trawling through the cloud pricing pages working out how pricing works for different cloud services. We’re grateful for the contributors who have helped us with this. AWS currently has over 2 million price points and this is constantly increasing. Users are requesting better support for usage-based services like data transfer, S3 and Lambda. Currently we allow for usage estimates to be passed into the tool, and are looking at other methods, i.e. based on last month’s actual usage. We’ve also learned, the hard way, the importance of UX in CLI and workflow tools. So far we are seeing a few use-cases for Infracost. Some enterprise users have integrated it into their “self-service” cloud catalog to set cost expectations before provisioning. Other users have integrated it into their CI pipeline as a safety net to catch unexpected costs. And some users are running it at design time to compare options and model usage. We’ve talked to Sid Sijbrandij (CEO of GitLab), and Ian Tien (CEO of Mattermost) about when and how to monetize. Currently we are thinking about a buyer-based open core approach, in which the individual contributor edition will always be free, and enterprise paid features will include multi-team support, management reports and private cloud support. We’d really appreciate it if you try it out and give us feedback. You can check out the repo at https://ift.tt/31NTx2e . We’d love your thoughts on our approach, and anything that has worked, or hasn’t worked for you when it comes to managing cloud costs. February 8, 2021 at 06:06AM
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(https://ift.tt/36TSIY0Show HN: A fast way to track crypto popularity http://shitcoin.watch February 7, 2021 at 07:33PM
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(https://ift.tt/2LAM9lIShow HN: Online Code Diffchecker https://ift.tt/3ty26dD February 8, 2021 at 04:36AM
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(https://ift.tt/2Lwjuy9Show HN: Which Countries Have the Most Open-Source Contribution? The last two weeks of Console [1] I interviewed people who are not from the U.S. about their open-source projects. This got me thinking, are people outside the U.S. more prone to contribute to open-source than U.S. developers? So, I went looking by pulling in the location data for 500,000 publicly available repos to answer this question. Why 500,000? Well, GitHub rate limits their API to roughly 1 request per second [2], and I didn’t want to wait a year to write about my findings, or abuse their API. Anyway, here are the results: None: 328, US: 232, Other: 38, United Kingdom: 29, Germany: 25, Canada: 17, Australia: 15, Switzerland: 9, Netherlands: 8, France: 8, Japan: 6, Romania: 5, Sweden: 5, Finland: 5, New Zealand: 4, Spain: 4, Russia: 3, Czech Republic: 3, Slovenia: 2, Bulgaria: 2, China: 2, Norway: 2, Argentina: 1, Singapore: 1, Hong Kong: 1, India: 1, Chile: 1, Poland: 1 Since the GitHub location is free-form, Other was used to capture things like “Everywhere”, or “The Internet”. You might be thinking, “gee, this seems low”, and this is because not only did I only look at 500,000 repos, but, I also only took repos with >1K stars, as I considered that a good heuristic for what I would consider a “substantial” contribution. Anyway, there are obvious flaws with this approach (for example, are US repos more likely to be starred than others?), but it was enough to sate my curiosity and figured I’d pass it along to others in case they were also interested. [1] https://ift.tt/3mnVVoh [2] https://twitter.com/sjkelleyjr/status/1357523698039676928 February 7, 2021 at 03:10PM
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(https://ift.tt/2O8BJKQShow HN: Which Countries Have the Most Open-Source Contribution? The last two weeks of Console [1] I interviewed people who are not from the U.S. about their open-source projects. This got me thinking, are people outside the U.S. more prone to contribute to open-source than U.S. developers? So, I went looking by pulling in the location data for 500,000 publicly available repos to answer this question. Why 500,000? Well, GitHub rate limits their API to roughly 1 request per second [2], and I didn’t want to wait a year to write about my findings, or abuse their API. Anyway, here are the results: None: 328, US: 232, Other: 38, United Kingdom: 29, Germany: 25, Canada: 17, Australia: 15, Switzerland: 9, Netherlands: 8, France: 8, Japan: 6, Romania: 5, Sweden: 5, Finland: 5, New Zealand: 4, Spain: 4, Russia: 3, Czech Republic: 3, Slovenia: 2, Bulgaria: 2, China: 2, Norway: 2, Argentina: 1, Singapore: 1, Hong Kong: 1, India: 1, Chile: 1, Poland: 1 Since the GitHub location is free-form, Other was used to capture things like “Everywhere”, or “The Internet”. You might be thinking, “gee, this seems low”, and this is because not only did I only look at 500,000 repos, but, I also only took repos with >1K stars, as I considered that a good heuristic for what I would consider a “substantial” contribution. Anyway, there are obvious flaws with this approach (for example, are US repos more likely to be starred than others?), but it was enough to sate my curiosity and figured I’d pass it along to others in case they were also interested. [1] https://ift.tt/3mnVVoh [2] https://twitter.com/sjkelleyjr/status/1357523698039676928 February 7, 2021 at 03:10PM
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(https://ift.tt/3tJPNenShow HN: Black Hat Rust – I’m writing a book about offensive security with Rust https://ift.tt/3rnCQEK February 7, 2021 at 03:16AM
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(https://ift.tt/3jzbVU0Show HN: One thousand in – I’ve built an IPO “FOMO” web app https://onethousand.in/ February 7, 2021 at 06:08AM
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(https://ift.tt/3rzuutJShow HN: DatoRss the simplest RSS search engine ever made https://ift.tt/2LfLFkO February 7, 2021 at 05:17AM
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(https://ift.tt/2YQB5nqShow HN: Speak After Click – P2P audio calls where you never get interrupted https://ift.tt/3aLq78t February 7, 2021 at 03:56AM
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(https://ift.tt/3cObi7sShow HN: Black Hat Rust – I’m writing a book about offensive security with Rust https://ift.tt/3rnCQEK February 7, 2021 at 03:16AM
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(https://ift.tt/2YVFKo0Show HN: CopyPasteTaxes https://ift.tt/3aF5Ktx February 6, 2021 at 01:02PM
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(https://ift.tt/3tAR0o8Show HN: Epub.to – ePub to pdf, ePub to mobi, ePub to kindle, and an ePub API https://epub.to February 6, 2021 at 11:11AM
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(https://ift.tt/3pXY0JwShow HN: 10x Your YouTube Productivity https://you-tldr.com/ February 6, 2021 at 11:05AM
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(https://ift.tt/3rv7L25Show HN: Fusio – open-source API management platform 2.0 released https://ift.tt/2neL8RO February 6, 2021 at 10:52AM
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(https://ift.tt/3ruvM9zShow HN: LibreTransate – Open-source neural machine translation API https://ift.tt/2WAUS9h February 6, 2021 at 10:48AM
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(https://ift.tt/39TB6gzShow HN: CopyPasteTaxes https://ift.tt/3aF5Ktx February 6, 2021 at 01:02PM
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(https://ift.tt/2MyZwU4Show HN: Epub.to – ePub to pdf, ePub to mobi, ePub to kindle, and an ePub API https://epub.to February 6, 2021 at 11:11AM
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(https://ift.tt/2MzN4n0Show HN: 10x Your YouTube Productivity https://you-tldr.com/ February 6, 2021 at 11:05AM
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(https://ift.tt/39V0HG4Show HN: Fusio – open-source API management platform 2.0 released https://ift.tt/2neL8RO February 6, 2021 at 10:52AM
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(https://ift.tt/3oUCwvFShow HN: LibreTransate – Open-source neural machine translation API https://ift.tt/2WAUS9h February 6, 2021 at 10:48AM
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(https://ift.tt/3rz0rCJShow HN: Hire Hacker News https://ift.tt/3aBjTb7 February 5, 2021 at 06:47PM
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(https://ift.tt/3aCLQzaShow HN: Temps-lite – 5mb clone of 43mb Electron weather app https://ift.tt/3cKZy5L February 5, 2021 at 06:01PM
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(https://ift.tt/36QqpcKShow HN: Pleke – free personal finance app for Android and iOS https://pleke.com/ February 5, 2021 at 01:10PM
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(https://ift.tt/3q171ScShow HN: Hire Hacker News https://ift.tt/3aBjTb7 February 5, 2021 at 06:47PM
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(https://ift.tt/3cNz3N4Show HN: Temps-lite – 5mb clone of 43mb Electron weather app https://ift.tt/3cKZy5L February 5, 2021 at 06:01PM
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(https://ift.tt/3q16YG0Show HN: Pleke – free personal finance app for Android and iOS https://pleke.com/ February 5, 2021 at 01:10PM
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(https://ift.tt/3oUfLb9Show HN: Inlets 3.0 RC1 https://ift.tt/36MJWeb February 5, 2021 at 04:46AM
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(https://ift.tt/2ObXsleShow HN: SVG Shape Generator – Create organic-looking shapes for your designs https://ift.tt/3aBcV5Z February 5, 2021 at 06:38AM
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(https://ift.tt/39OqCPDShow HN: Inlets 3.0 RC1 https://ift.tt/36MJWeb February 5, 2021 at 04:46AM
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(https://ift.tt/3cGjtmtShow HN: Graxel, a pocket doodling editor in pixel art https://ift.tt/3rnlkQZ February 5, 2021 at 02:19AM
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(https://ift.tt/39PN0YUShow HN: I curated a list of actionable advice by indiehackers https://ift.tt/3azI4Xj February 5, 2021 at 12:55AM
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