The best Hacker News stories from Show from the past day
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Show HN: PinkArrows – An open-source Skitch alternative on the web
I really loved Skitch. In fact, the pink Skitch arrows and dumbed-down text became a trademark of mine in multiple jobs. In a sea of text on Slack and email, Skitch annotations are a refreshing way to make a single, obvious, and easy to digest point. Since Skitch shut down, I've looked for multiple alternatives that are: Free-ish, have similar styling, and are lightweight (no signin, no server syncing). I didn't find any, so I built PinkArrows. Live version at <a href="https://pinkarrows.app" rel="nofollow">https://pinkarrows.app</a>
Show HN: FlowVision – Waterfall-Style Image Browser for macOS (Open-Source)
Show HN: FlowVision – Waterfall-Style Image Browser for macOS (Open-Source)
Show HN: FlowVision – Waterfall-Style Image Browser for macOS (Open-Source)
Show HN: Robata, macOS window selector: put it on the grill
Hello HN,<p>This is a macOS app that allows you to see all your open windows on each monitor and select the one you want.<p>It also lets you view the current state of things like email or chat windows, terminal processes, and more.<p>You can use "cmd" and the key above the tab key for alt-tab like behaviour.<p>You can also toggle the UI by resting a finger on the corner of your trackpad.<p>I also wrote some dev details here:<p><a href="https://madebyenzo.com/#robata" rel="nofollow">https://madebyenzo.com/#robata</a>
Show HN: Robata, macOS window selector: put it on the grill
Hello HN,<p>This is a macOS app that allows you to see all your open windows on each monitor and select the one you want.<p>It also lets you view the current state of things like email or chat windows, terminal processes, and more.<p>You can use "cmd" and the key above the tab key for alt-tab like behaviour.<p>You can also toggle the UI by resting a finger on the corner of your trackpad.<p>I also wrote some dev details here:<p><a href="https://madebyenzo.com/#robata" rel="nofollow">https://madebyenzo.com/#robata</a>
Show HN: Robata, macOS window selector: put it on the grill
Hello HN,<p>This is a macOS app that allows you to see all your open windows on each monitor and select the one you want.<p>It also lets you view the current state of things like email or chat windows, terminal processes, and more.<p>You can use "cmd" and the key above the tab key for alt-tab like behaviour.<p>You can also toggle the UI by resting a finger on the corner of your trackpad.<p>I also wrote some dev details here:<p><a href="https://madebyenzo.com/#robata" rel="nofollow">https://madebyenzo.com/#robata</a>
Show HN: Srcbook – A TypeScript notebook for rapid prototyping
Srcbook (”source-book”) is an open-source TypeScript notebook that runs locally, powered by Node.js. It shines for rapid prototyping, code exploration, and collaborating on ideas. It’s inspired by Python’s Jupyter and Elixir’s Livebook.<p>Key features:<p>- Full npm ecosystem access<p>- AI-assisted coding (OpenAI, Anthropic, or local models), it can iterate on the cells for you with a code diff UX that you accept/reject for a given code cell, generate entire Srcbooks, fix compilation issues, etc…<p>- Exports to valid markdown for easy sharing and version control<p>Try it now: `npx srcbook start`<p>Examples Srcbooks to explore: <a href="https://hub.srcbook.com">https://hub.srcbook.com</a><p>We built this because we needed a Jupyter-like environment for TypeScript, we hope others like it as much as we do! Feedback and contributions are super appreciated.<p>(edit: formatting)
Show HN: Srcbook – A TypeScript notebook for rapid prototyping
Srcbook (”source-book”) is an open-source TypeScript notebook that runs locally, powered by Node.js. It shines for rapid prototyping, code exploration, and collaborating on ideas. It’s inspired by Python’s Jupyter and Elixir’s Livebook.<p>Key features:<p>- Full npm ecosystem access<p>- AI-assisted coding (OpenAI, Anthropic, or local models), it can iterate on the cells for you with a code diff UX that you accept/reject for a given code cell, generate entire Srcbooks, fix compilation issues, etc…<p>- Exports to valid markdown for easy sharing and version control<p>Try it now: `npx srcbook start`<p>Examples Srcbooks to explore: <a href="https://hub.srcbook.com">https://hub.srcbook.com</a><p>We built this because we needed a Jupyter-like environment for TypeScript, we hope others like it as much as we do! Feedback and contributions are super appreciated.<p>(edit: formatting)
Show HN: Srcbook – A TypeScript notebook for rapid prototyping
Srcbook (”source-book”) is an open-source TypeScript notebook that runs locally, powered by Node.js. It shines for rapid prototyping, code exploration, and collaborating on ideas. It’s inspired by Python’s Jupyter and Elixir’s Livebook.<p>Key features:<p>- Full npm ecosystem access<p>- AI-assisted coding (OpenAI, Anthropic, or local models), it can iterate on the cells for you with a code diff UX that you accept/reject for a given code cell, generate entire Srcbooks, fix compilation issues, etc…<p>- Exports to valid markdown for easy sharing and version control<p>Try it now: `npx srcbook start`<p>Examples Srcbooks to explore: <a href="https://hub.srcbook.com">https://hub.srcbook.com</a><p>We built this because we needed a Jupyter-like environment for TypeScript, we hope others like it as much as we do! Feedback and contributions are super appreciated.<p>(edit: formatting)
Show HN: Srcbook – A TypeScript notebook for rapid prototyping
Srcbook (”source-book”) is an open-source TypeScript notebook that runs locally, powered by Node.js. It shines for rapid prototyping, code exploration, and collaborating on ideas. It’s inspired by Python’s Jupyter and Elixir’s Livebook.<p>Key features:<p>- Full npm ecosystem access<p>- AI-assisted coding (OpenAI, Anthropic, or local models), it can iterate on the cells for you with a code diff UX that you accept/reject for a given code cell, generate entire Srcbooks, fix compilation issues, etc…<p>- Exports to valid markdown for easy sharing and version control<p>Try it now: `npx srcbook start`<p>Examples Srcbooks to explore: <a href="https://hub.srcbook.com">https://hub.srcbook.com</a><p>We built this because we needed a Jupyter-like environment for TypeScript, we hope others like it as much as we do! Feedback and contributions are super appreciated.<p>(edit: formatting)
Show HN: Srcbook – A TypeScript notebook for rapid prototyping
Srcbook (”source-book”) is an open-source TypeScript notebook that runs locally, powered by Node.js. It shines for rapid prototyping, code exploration, and collaborating on ideas. It’s inspired by Python’s Jupyter and Elixir’s Livebook.<p>Key features:<p>- Full npm ecosystem access<p>- AI-assisted coding (OpenAI, Anthropic, or local models), it can iterate on the cells for you with a code diff UX that you accept/reject for a given code cell, generate entire Srcbooks, fix compilation issues, etc…<p>- Exports to valid markdown for easy sharing and version control<p>Try it now: `npx srcbook start`<p>Examples Srcbooks to explore: <a href="https://hub.srcbook.com">https://hub.srcbook.com</a><p>We built this because we needed a Jupyter-like environment for TypeScript, we hope others like it as much as we do! Feedback and contributions are super appreciated.<p>(edit: formatting)
Show HN: AdalFlow: The library to build and auto-optimize any LLM task pipeline
Show HN: AdalFlow: The library to build and auto-optimize any LLM task pipeline
Show HN: I Made a Website for Problems
Hey everyone! While searching for entrepreneurial ideas on various sites, I noticed there wasn’t a dedicated space for finding and discussing real-world problems that need solving. That’s why I created the Problem Platform—a place where we can share, explore, and tackle problems together. Check it out!
Show HN: I Made a Website for Problems
Hey everyone! While searching for entrepreneurial ideas on various sites, I noticed there wasn’t a dedicated space for finding and discussing real-world problems that need solving. That’s why I created the Problem Platform—a place where we can share, explore, and tackle problems together. Check it out!
Show HN: I Made a Website for Problems
Hey everyone! While searching for entrepreneurial ideas on various sites, I noticed there wasn’t a dedicated space for finding and discussing real-world problems that need solving. That’s why I created the Problem Platform—a place where we can share, explore, and tackle problems together. Check it out!
Show HN: Grug Notes, a simple take on text notes
Hey hacker news, I've worked on a note/wiki app nights and weekends for almost two years. While still missing some essentials and polish, I'm happy with the progress and some of my use cases: personal CRM, work notes, and a place to write/record funny things my kid says.<p>I bought into the hype a few years ago with linking apps but quickly grew tired of spinners and steep learning curves, so I started over with a text box and my HTML skills from twenty years ago. Then Chatgpt came out, giving me the tools to add a bit of magic and dig into my stance on simplicity even more.<p>I'd love to get a few more people testing. HN may not be the target user, but it's the best crowd for feedback.<p>Grug Notes is an effort I've been able to fit in after my kid goes to sleep. As someone who is not always on a computer for my work, I became disillusioned with Roam Research, Coda, and Notion. I have no ambition to build a big company, but a cash-flowing saas sounds nice.<p>Building this has been a source of flow and optimism when the rest of my life has been chaos. My entire career and current business is building carbon fiber outrigger canoes, but competing against good products made in China is nearly impossible. I've tried for 17 years. I may try for 17 more. But it's also very realistic that without some diversification into aerospace or tech, my days as a small business owner in manufacturing may be numbered. My last three years have not gone as planned personally and professionally, and the reality is that I've used programming as some form of escapism. I've enjoyed it and will keep working on Grug Notes indefinitely, but with my daughter starting pre-school next week and my regular business needing my attention, I'm at an inflection point. It's probably time I push to move beyond seven paying customers so I'm not paying server bills out of pocket. :)<p>Anyway, I'd love for anyone to take a look, and I am happy to answer any questions about Grug Notes or canoes!
Show HN: Grug Notes, a simple take on text notes
Hey hacker news, I've worked on a note/wiki app nights and weekends for almost two years. While still missing some essentials and polish, I'm happy with the progress and some of my use cases: personal CRM, work notes, and a place to write/record funny things my kid says.<p>I bought into the hype a few years ago with linking apps but quickly grew tired of spinners and steep learning curves, so I started over with a text box and my HTML skills from twenty years ago. Then Chatgpt came out, giving me the tools to add a bit of magic and dig into my stance on simplicity even more.<p>I'd love to get a few more people testing. HN may not be the target user, but it's the best crowd for feedback.<p>Grug Notes is an effort I've been able to fit in after my kid goes to sleep. As someone who is not always on a computer for my work, I became disillusioned with Roam Research, Coda, and Notion. I have no ambition to build a big company, but a cash-flowing saas sounds nice.<p>Building this has been a source of flow and optimism when the rest of my life has been chaos. My entire career and current business is building carbon fiber outrigger canoes, but competing against good products made in China is nearly impossible. I've tried for 17 years. I may try for 17 more. But it's also very realistic that without some diversification into aerospace or tech, my days as a small business owner in manufacturing may be numbered. My last three years have not gone as planned personally and professionally, and the reality is that I've used programming as some form of escapism. I've enjoyed it and will keep working on Grug Notes indefinitely, but with my daughter starting pre-school next week and my regular business needing my attention, I'm at an inflection point. It's probably time I push to move beyond seven paying customers so I'm not paying server bills out of pocket. :)<p>Anyway, I'd love for anyone to take a look, and I am happy to answer any questions about Grug Notes or canoes!
Show HN: PgQueuer – Transform PostgreSQL into a Job Queue
PgQueuer is a minimalist, high-performance job queue library for Python, leveraging the robustness of PostgreSQL. Designed for simplicity and efficiency, PgQueuer uses PostgreSQL's LISTEN/NOTIFY to manage job queues effortlessly.