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Show HN: I Made a Sudoku Game

Source: <a href="https://github.com/alabhyajindal/sudoku/blob/main/index.html">https://github.com/alabhyajindal/sudoku/blob/main/index.html</a>

Show HN: I Made a Sudoku Game

Source: <a href="https://github.com/alabhyajindal/sudoku/blob/main/index.html">https://github.com/alabhyajindal/sudoku/blob/main/index.html</a>

Show HN: I Made a Sudoku Game

Source: <a href="https://github.com/alabhyajindal/sudoku/blob/main/index.html">https://github.com/alabhyajindal/sudoku/blob/main/index.html</a>

Show HN: I've updated my food delivery repo. Feedback Welcome

Hey everyone! Over the past few years, I've dedicated my time to crafting a customizable solution for food delivery management. Now, I'm excited to showcase the culmination of all my work. Throughout the development journey, I've successfully incorporated all the planned features and even expanded upon them based on valuable feedback from the community.<p>My methodology has consistently involved seeking input from platforms like Reddit and forums, where I engage with like-minded individuals. Some of the recent enhancements stem directly from this collaborative feedback, and I'm eager to gather more insights on the latest update to the project.<p>Designed with a focus on individuals or businesses looking to start their own food delivery services, this solution simplifies the process of adding vendors, managing food items, coordinating deliveries, and overseeing riders. Beyond these core functionalities, you'll find a bunch of other features, including order tracking, real-time notifications, and more.<p>Since I don’t have a substantial team backing me, I truly appreciate any assistance you can offer. Every form of contribution is valued.<p>Give it a star and share your thoughts in the comments section. Your support means the world to me!

Show HN: Auto Wiki – Turn your codebase into a Wiki

Hi HN! I’m Omar from Mutable.ai. We want to introduce Auto Wiki (<a href="https://wiki.mutable.ai/">https://wiki.mutable.ai/</a>), which lets you generate a Wiki-style website to document your codebase. Citations link to code, with clickable references to each line of code being discussed. Here are some examples of popular projects:<p>React: <a href="https://wiki.mutable.ai/facebook/react">https://wiki.mutable.ai/facebook/react</a><p>Ollama <a href="https://wiki.mutable.ai/jmorganca/ollama">https://wiki.mutable.ai/jmorganca/ollama</a><p>D3: <a href="https://wiki.mutable.ai/d3/d3">https://wiki.mutable.ai/d3/d3</a><p>Terraform: <a href="https://wiki.mutable.ai/hashicorp/terraform">https://wiki.mutable.ai/hashicorp/terraform</a><p>Bitcoin: <a href="https://wiki.mutable.ai/bitcoin/bitcoin">https://wiki.mutable.ai/bitcoin/bitcoin</a><p>Mastodon: <a href="https://wiki.mutable.ai/mastodon/mastodon">https://wiki.mutable.ai/mastodon/mastodon</a><p>Auto Wiki makes it easy to see at a high level what a codebase is doing and how the work is divided. In some cases we’ve identified entire obsolete sections of codebases by seeing a section for code that was no longer important. Auto Wiki relies on our citations system which cuts back on hallucinations. The citations link to a precise reference or definition which means the wiki generation is grounded on the basis of the code being cited rather than free form generation.<p>We’ve run Auto Wiki on the most popular 1,000 repos on GitHub. If you want us to generate a wiki of a public repo for you, just comment in this thread! The wikis take time to generate as we are still ramping up our capacity, but I’ll reply that we’ve launched the process and then come back with a link to your wiki when it’s ready.<p>For private repos, you can use our app (<a href="https://app.mutable.ai">https://app.mutable.ai</a>) to generate wikis. We also offer private deployments with our own model for enterprise customers; you can ping us at info@mutable.ai. Anyone that already has access to a repo through GitHub will be able to view the wiki, only the person generating the wikis needs to pay to create them. Pricing starts at $4 and ramps up by $2 increments depending on how large your repo is.<p>In an upcoming version of Auto Wiki, we’ll include other sources of information relevant to your code and generate architectural diagrams.<p>Please check out Auto Wiki and let us know your thoughts! Thank you!

Show HN: Auto Wiki – Turn your codebase into a Wiki

Hi HN! I’m Omar from Mutable.ai. We want to introduce Auto Wiki (<a href="https://wiki.mutable.ai/">https://wiki.mutable.ai/</a>), which lets you generate a Wiki-style website to document your codebase. Citations link to code, with clickable references to each line of code being discussed. Here are some examples of popular projects:<p>React: <a href="https://wiki.mutable.ai/facebook/react">https://wiki.mutable.ai/facebook/react</a><p>Ollama <a href="https://wiki.mutable.ai/jmorganca/ollama">https://wiki.mutable.ai/jmorganca/ollama</a><p>D3: <a href="https://wiki.mutable.ai/d3/d3">https://wiki.mutable.ai/d3/d3</a><p>Terraform: <a href="https://wiki.mutable.ai/hashicorp/terraform">https://wiki.mutable.ai/hashicorp/terraform</a><p>Bitcoin: <a href="https://wiki.mutable.ai/bitcoin/bitcoin">https://wiki.mutable.ai/bitcoin/bitcoin</a><p>Mastodon: <a href="https://wiki.mutable.ai/mastodon/mastodon">https://wiki.mutable.ai/mastodon/mastodon</a><p>Auto Wiki makes it easy to see at a high level what a codebase is doing and how the work is divided. In some cases we’ve identified entire obsolete sections of codebases by seeing a section for code that was no longer important. Auto Wiki relies on our citations system which cuts back on hallucinations. The citations link to a precise reference or definition which means the wiki generation is grounded on the basis of the code being cited rather than free form generation.<p>We’ve run Auto Wiki on the most popular 1,000 repos on GitHub. If you want us to generate a wiki of a public repo for you, just comment in this thread! The wikis take time to generate as we are still ramping up our capacity, but I’ll reply that we’ve launched the process and then come back with a link to your wiki when it’s ready.<p>For private repos, you can use our app (<a href="https://app.mutable.ai">https://app.mutable.ai</a>) to generate wikis. We also offer private deployments with our own model for enterprise customers; you can ping us at info@mutable.ai. Anyone that already has access to a repo through GitHub will be able to view the wiki, only the person generating the wikis needs to pay to create them. Pricing starts at $4 and ramps up by $2 increments depending on how large your repo is.<p>In an upcoming version of Auto Wiki, we’ll include other sources of information relevant to your code and generate architectural diagrams.<p>Please check out Auto Wiki and let us know your thoughts! Thank you!

Show HN: Auto Wiki – Turn your codebase into a Wiki

Hi HN! I’m Omar from Mutable.ai. We want to introduce Auto Wiki (<a href="https://wiki.mutable.ai/">https://wiki.mutable.ai/</a>), which lets you generate a Wiki-style website to document your codebase. Citations link to code, with clickable references to each line of code being discussed. Here are some examples of popular projects:<p>React: <a href="https://wiki.mutable.ai/facebook/react">https://wiki.mutable.ai/facebook/react</a><p>Ollama <a href="https://wiki.mutable.ai/jmorganca/ollama">https://wiki.mutable.ai/jmorganca/ollama</a><p>D3: <a href="https://wiki.mutable.ai/d3/d3">https://wiki.mutable.ai/d3/d3</a><p>Terraform: <a href="https://wiki.mutable.ai/hashicorp/terraform">https://wiki.mutable.ai/hashicorp/terraform</a><p>Bitcoin: <a href="https://wiki.mutable.ai/bitcoin/bitcoin">https://wiki.mutable.ai/bitcoin/bitcoin</a><p>Mastodon: <a href="https://wiki.mutable.ai/mastodon/mastodon">https://wiki.mutable.ai/mastodon/mastodon</a><p>Auto Wiki makes it easy to see at a high level what a codebase is doing and how the work is divided. In some cases we’ve identified entire obsolete sections of codebases by seeing a section for code that was no longer important. Auto Wiki relies on our citations system which cuts back on hallucinations. The citations link to a precise reference or definition which means the wiki generation is grounded on the basis of the code being cited rather than free form generation.<p>We’ve run Auto Wiki on the most popular 1,000 repos on GitHub. If you want us to generate a wiki of a public repo for you, just comment in this thread! The wikis take time to generate as we are still ramping up our capacity, but I’ll reply that we’ve launched the process and then come back with a link to your wiki when it’s ready.<p>For private repos, you can use our app (<a href="https://app.mutable.ai">https://app.mutable.ai</a>) to generate wikis. We also offer private deployments with our own model for enterprise customers; you can ping us at info@mutable.ai. Anyone that already has access to a repo through GitHub will be able to view the wiki, only the person generating the wikis needs to pay to create them. Pricing starts at $4 and ramps up by $2 increments depending on how large your repo is.<p>In an upcoming version of Auto Wiki, we’ll include other sources of information relevant to your code and generate architectural diagrams.<p>Please check out Auto Wiki and let us know your thoughts! Thank you!

Show HN: Auto Wiki – Turn your codebase into a Wiki

Hi HN! I’m Omar from Mutable.ai. We want to introduce Auto Wiki (<a href="https://wiki.mutable.ai/">https://wiki.mutable.ai/</a>), which lets you generate a Wiki-style website to document your codebase. Citations link to code, with clickable references to each line of code being discussed. Here are some examples of popular projects:<p>React: <a href="https://wiki.mutable.ai/facebook/react">https://wiki.mutable.ai/facebook/react</a><p>Ollama <a href="https://wiki.mutable.ai/jmorganca/ollama">https://wiki.mutable.ai/jmorganca/ollama</a><p>D3: <a href="https://wiki.mutable.ai/d3/d3">https://wiki.mutable.ai/d3/d3</a><p>Terraform: <a href="https://wiki.mutable.ai/hashicorp/terraform">https://wiki.mutable.ai/hashicorp/terraform</a><p>Bitcoin: <a href="https://wiki.mutable.ai/bitcoin/bitcoin">https://wiki.mutable.ai/bitcoin/bitcoin</a><p>Mastodon: <a href="https://wiki.mutable.ai/mastodon/mastodon">https://wiki.mutable.ai/mastodon/mastodon</a><p>Auto Wiki makes it easy to see at a high level what a codebase is doing and how the work is divided. In some cases we’ve identified entire obsolete sections of codebases by seeing a section for code that was no longer important. Auto Wiki relies on our citations system which cuts back on hallucinations. The citations link to a precise reference or definition which means the wiki generation is grounded on the basis of the code being cited rather than free form generation.<p>We’ve run Auto Wiki on the most popular 1,000 repos on GitHub. If you want us to generate a wiki of a public repo for you, just comment in this thread! The wikis take time to generate as we are still ramping up our capacity, but I’ll reply that we’ve launched the process and then come back with a link to your wiki when it’s ready.<p>For private repos, you can use our app (<a href="https://app.mutable.ai">https://app.mutable.ai</a>) to generate wikis. We also offer private deployments with our own model for enterprise customers; you can ping us at info@mutable.ai. Anyone that already has access to a repo through GitHub will be able to view the wiki, only the person generating the wikis needs to pay to create them. Pricing starts at $4 and ramps up by $2 increments depending on how large your repo is.<p>In an upcoming version of Auto Wiki, we’ll include other sources of information relevant to your code and generate architectural diagrams.<p>Please check out Auto Wiki and let us know your thoughts! Thank you!

Show HN: I made a HTMX Playground 100% in the browser

I recently dug up an old project in an attempt to improve on it. It's a code sandbox for playing around with HTMX in the browser, that runs a mock server within the sandbox iframe. The server "framework" is loosely based on Django, so if you're familiar with Django, you'll immediately understand what's going on.<p>I recommend clicking through the examples.<p>Github repo: <a href="https://github.com/lassebomh/htmx-playground">https://github.com/lassebomh/htmx-playground</a><p>Probably my favorite part is the lack of HTMX specific code. It's designed to mimic the client and server, but really nothing else. In principle, this means that it is agnostic to whatever frontend framework is being used.<p>Known problems: Limited mobile support, Ace Editor (should just be Monaco) and lack of proper error outputs.<p>Feel free to give feedback, suggestions or questions.<p>I learned a lot when making it, and I hope you'll something about HTMX! Happy tinkering.

Show HN: I made a HTMX Playground 100% in the browser

I recently dug up an old project in an attempt to improve on it. It's a code sandbox for playing around with HTMX in the browser, that runs a mock server within the sandbox iframe. The server "framework" is loosely based on Django, so if you're familiar with Django, you'll immediately understand what's going on.<p>I recommend clicking through the examples.<p>Github repo: <a href="https://github.com/lassebomh/htmx-playground">https://github.com/lassebomh/htmx-playground</a><p>Probably my favorite part is the lack of HTMX specific code. It's designed to mimic the client and server, but really nothing else. In principle, this means that it is agnostic to whatever frontend framework is being used.<p>Known problems: Limited mobile support, Ace Editor (should just be Monaco) and lack of proper error outputs.<p>Feel free to give feedback, suggestions or questions.<p>I learned a lot when making it, and I hope you'll something about HTMX! Happy tinkering.

Show HN: I made a HTMX Playground 100% in the browser

I recently dug up an old project in an attempt to improve on it. It's a code sandbox for playing around with HTMX in the browser, that runs a mock server within the sandbox iframe. The server "framework" is loosely based on Django, so if you're familiar with Django, you'll immediately understand what's going on.<p>I recommend clicking through the examples.<p>Github repo: <a href="https://github.com/lassebomh/htmx-playground">https://github.com/lassebomh/htmx-playground</a><p>Probably my favorite part is the lack of HTMX specific code. It's designed to mimic the client and server, but really nothing else. In principle, this means that it is agnostic to whatever frontend framework is being used.<p>Known problems: Limited mobile support, Ace Editor (should just be Monaco) and lack of proper error outputs.<p>Feel free to give feedback, suggestions or questions.<p>I learned a lot when making it, and I hope you'll something about HTMX! Happy tinkering.

Designing, manufacturing, and selling an LED 'social battery' pin badge

Show HN: New RISC-V emulator for Computer Science education

Just released EGG, an emulator created for teaching Assembly and microprocessors (designed to suit the needs of the Microprocessors classes, at Universidade Federal do Paraná, Brazil). The emulator will support multiple architetures in the future, but currently only RISC-V is implemented.

Show HN: New RISC-V emulator for Computer Science education

Just released EGG, an emulator created for teaching Assembly and microprocessors (designed to suit the needs of the Microprocessors classes, at Universidade Federal do Paraná, Brazil). The emulator will support multiple architetures in the future, but currently only RISC-V is implemented.

Show HN: New RISC-V emulator for Computer Science education

Just released EGG, an emulator created for teaching Assembly and microprocessors (designed to suit the needs of the Microprocessors classes, at Universidade Federal do Paraná, Brazil). The emulator will support multiple architetures in the future, but currently only RISC-V is implemented.

Show HN: I built a tool to send 10k emails for $1 via AWS

Show HN: Building a 'liturgical lightbulb', bringing the Calendar to life

Show HN: Building a 'liturgical lightbulb', bringing the Calendar to life

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.

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