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Someone bought 26.9 BTC on Binance and sent it to Satoshi's dead wallet
The New York Times Launches a Strong Case Against Microsoft and OpenAI
Irish State announce plan to build a porn preference register for most of the EU
GitUI
Original Age of Empires 2 dev talks about its usage of assembly code
DNS Toys (2022)
Windows XP 2024 Edition is everything I want from a new OS
Pocketbase: Open-source back end in one file
Show HN: I made an app that consolidated 18 apps (doc, sheet, form, site, chat…)
Nino is a radical approach to solve the app chaos problem for today's knowledge worker. I believe there are still too many tools; even using them becomes work in itself. I'm building all these apps from scratch in one place, using the same database and UI, with the flexibility to eventually support the majority of work from one "superapp."<p>Currently there are 18 apps (called "modules") on Nino:<p>- Database types: Sheet, Form, Calendar, Gallery, Board, Todo, List<p>- Composition types: Doc, Slide, Drive, Notebook, Canvas, Grid, Blog, Site<p>- Communication types: Channel, Chat, Meet<p>I want to improve these modules and build more. Your feedback is important!<p>FAQ: How is it different from Google Workspace, Microsoft 365, or startups like Notion and Clickup?<p>A: I <i>think</i> Nino has a better foundation to (1) consolidate a lot more apps than they currently do, (2) drastically improve speed with offline architecture, and (3) offer unmatched privacy and security with end-to-end encryption (coming soon)<p>Let me expand on these points:<p>1. Consolidation<p>In Nino, pages and blocks are interoperable with each other. Google and Microsoft still have mostly isolated apps. Nino is one (super)app that supports 18 modules, saving you time from switching and integrating between different providers.<p>2. Offline mode<p>This is actually more complex than it seems, but I ultimately decided it's worth it, not only for people who need to work without internet, but also for everyone else who want instant page load. Everything is saved locally by default.<p>3. End-to-end encryption (E2EE)<p>This is just a preview and not open to public yet, but is something I have been building alongside since day 1. In fact, it's likely not architecturally possible for existing products to add later on. Nino is built to offer both E2EE and cloud features (backup, search, collaboration).<p>One more thing: pages on Nino are also publishable! There are blog and site modules, but you can also publish other modules (i.e. sheet, board, canvas, etc.) on your custom domain or on a free nino.page subdomain.<p>Give it a try and let me know how it can improve. I want to hear from you.
Show HN: I made an app that consolidated 18 apps (doc, sheet, form, site, chat…)
Nino is a radical approach to solve the app chaos problem for today's knowledge worker. I believe there are still too many tools; even using them becomes work in itself. I'm building all these apps from scratch in one place, using the same database and UI, with the flexibility to eventually support the majority of work from one "superapp."<p>Currently there are 18 apps (called "modules") on Nino:<p>- Database types: Sheet, Form, Calendar, Gallery, Board, Todo, List<p>- Composition types: Doc, Slide, Drive, Notebook, Canvas, Grid, Blog, Site<p>- Communication types: Channel, Chat, Meet<p>I want to improve these modules and build more. Your feedback is important!<p>FAQ: How is it different from Google Workspace, Microsoft 365, or startups like Notion and Clickup?<p>A: I <i>think</i> Nino has a better foundation to (1) consolidate a lot more apps than they currently do, (2) drastically improve speed with offline architecture, and (3) offer unmatched privacy and security with end-to-end encryption (coming soon)<p>Let me expand on these points:<p>1. Consolidation<p>In Nino, pages and blocks are interoperable with each other. Google and Microsoft still have mostly isolated apps. Nino is one (super)app that supports 18 modules, saving you time from switching and integrating between different providers.<p>2. Offline mode<p>This is actually more complex than it seems, but I ultimately decided it's worth it, not only for people who need to work without internet, but also for everyone else who want instant page load. Everything is saved locally by default.<p>3. End-to-end encryption (E2EE)<p>This is just a preview and not open to public yet, but is something I have been building alongside since day 1. In fact, it's likely not architecturally possible for existing products to add later on. Nino is built to offer both E2EE and cloud features (backup, search, collaboration).<p>One more thing: pages on Nino are also publishable! There are blog and site modules, but you can also publish other modules (i.e. sheet, board, canvas, etc.) on your custom domain or on a free nino.page subdomain.<p>Give it a try and let me know how it can improve. I want to hear from you.
Fired comedian ordered to get day job back after jokes ruled 'simply funny'
Bad scientific code beats code following "best practices" (2014)
Alaska Airlines grounds Boeing 737 Max 9 planes after mid-air window blowout
IRS to begin trial of its own free tax-filing system
Fixing Macs door to door
FAA orders grounding of more than 170 Boeing 737 Max 9s
Show HN: I made a tool to compare time zones
YouTube demonetizes public domain 'Steamboat Willie' video after copyright claim
U.S. moves closer to filing antitrust case against Apple
How Australia’s ‘Bluey’ conquered children’s entertainment