Post a comment with instructions on how we can try your project. When someone responds with feedback, return the favor by finding their top level comment and trying out their project.
If you want to just give feedback thats also great.
EDIT: My hosting provider is having some issues now so you might not be able to try the demo, you can check out the status here: https://status.usertrack.net/
You can customize your tech stack and play around with the built-in "low code" editor by clicking a template on the homepage (no login needed).
Feedback much appreciated!
If anyone is interested in co-founding and located in NYC, let me know. Ideally with front-end or mobile experience and design oriented.
I know the interface could probably be more flashy and maybe some tweaks to make it more intuitive. I also plan to add better metric/English options, translations, and better output on the party half (how many bottles, cases, etc) as well as another input on what balance of drink type is preferred by attendees, like a spider chart (or whatever those web shaped charts are) of beer v wine v liquor.
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.blogspot.t...
Go to https://www.knotend.com and try making a flowchart or pick from one of the examples and try to edit it. In particular I'm looking for feedback on if this mode of interaction is intuitive to you and a productive way to make flowcharts.
I also manage this account 'wantfeedback' which made this post. It was inspired by a previous Ask HN I did to get feedback on knotend: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=27707521 . Please let me know what you think of this project exchange format.
Website: https://www.wrble.com/
The product:
I’ve build a log management platform out of frustration at the lack of competitive pricing and stagnant feature sets of existing logs management companies.
Target Customer:
Developers, System administrators, Devops, CTO’s , or who ever needs a log management platform.
Wrble at the moment is being used by a number of early adopters and teams in our community. We have also been using Wrble internally for the past few months as well.
I would love to hear your comments, feedbacks and thoughts.
Currently we are only in Alberta Canada, so if you want to search an address here's a random address from Calgary: 2205 33 Ave SW Calgary, AB T2T 1Z9
It has features like real time monitoring, error tracking, auto generated documentation and more.
Would love your feedback!
Looking for co-developers for the project. It will be non-profit and open source.
I have tons of ideas these days. Perhaps, that's the problem because the more I think about it, the less I feel like my heart still has it in me to do another project. There's a dark shadow growing over this industry, "one" no one sees because we've become dark in heart along with it, and its really a spiritual war at this point.
Day after day I read stories, mine included, programmers burned out, suicidal, and broken who want out--whom have no intention on returning. This sickness can't be resolved entirely just by learning to take your profession and work impersonally, or job hopping to another one, and just doing what most others do, which is do your time, clock in and clock out, and go home and escape from reality by driving drunk into the solace of the mass distraction machines like netflix. That sounds more like an internment camp with extra steps.
This is a moral dilemma the world over is suffering, sitting in a sort of loud silence. "One" that fully developed nations are now just starting to confront, as our economy reaches its latest stage. Can software really solve this problem or is it just part of the problem? Where has political reformation gotten us? We as humans, not "one" nation, are divided more than ever.
Part of me feels like the solution, if one exists, will certainly involve software, god knows I've tried, for years now, to think of how that would play out. I feel like the answer always results in what I call the "shadow" economy, the one that will rise from the ashes of the reputation economy, one that can end well or poorly for the future.
It's not just crypto currencies as one would be lead to think, it's just one measure that will be necessary. Frankly, it should only take a radically small fraction of the time to develop and ship software than it does now, but only because so much in this world is broken by design, not just software.
This is truly the greatest existential risk I see other than ML and the two are intimately connected, but the solution lies more in a new protocol, one, if you read about it, would sound more like science fiction than reality, and may require rethinking what language can be. But like all good protocols, it will need to be an intentionally "dumb" one. "One" is a misnomer because it would really be billions of small ones, but harkens back to the words of Alan Kay at the dawn of the web and before him perhaps Claude Shannon. But again, I would really rather discuss the problem than the solution.
Maybe this is a man's world after all, I would really love to hear what a woman has to say for once, they are the true "fixers", not just "makers".