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Ask HN: What are you working on? (February 2026)

256 pointsby david927last Sunday at 7:35 PM872 commentsview on HN

What are you working on? Any new ideas that you're thinking about?


Comments

drbojingleyesterday at 8:08 PM

I've been building several things lately in my spare time:

- After Actions (https://www.afteractions.net/) - The company I work for pays for retrospective software, and I figured I could make my own. So I did! Good for agile retrospective ceremonies

- Data Atlas (https://www.data-atlas.net/) - Right now, it's a basic JSON Schema form builder with a UI on top, but I intend to expand it and improve it to be more than that this year.

I've been working on a BuddhaBoard-like app and a few other projects, but nothing I'm prepared to share right now. Maybe next month :D

hudvinyesterday at 10:48 PM

I study German and decided to write app to simplify some tasks: 1) generate anki cards from text 2) extract highlighted words from paper and generate anki cards 3) collection of texts/dialogs on random topics 4) and so on... )

not sure if someone needs it, but very helpful for me )

ryanrastiyesterday at 6:43 PM

Building ExoAgent: a security layer for AI agents that enforces data flow policy, not just access control.

The problem: agents like OpenClaw can read your email and post to Slack. Nothing stops Email A's content from leaking to the wrong recipient, or PII from ending up in a Slack message. Current "security" is prompts saying "please don't leak data."

The fix: fine-grained data access (object-capabilities) + deterministic policy (information flow control). If an agent reads sensitive data, it structurally can't send it to an unauthorized sink. Policy as code, not suggestions.

Got a working IFC proof-of-concept last week. Now building a secure personal agent to dogfood it.

What integrations would you want if privacy/security wasn't a blocker? What's the agent use case you wish you could trust?

* https://exoagent.io

* https://github.com/ryanrasti/exoagent

mackrossyesterday at 6:30 PM

- A phoenix/ecto inspired batteries included framework for Golang. Uses data-star for real time bindings (can do live view like things but my personal favorite is just real time form validation out of the box). Hot reload with templ, daisy, and tailwind (no npm required). Routes file provides metadata on routes so type safe route helpers are generated for views and handlers.

joshuakcockrellyesterday at 7:28 PM

Lately I’ve been interested in how budgeting apps model cash flow over time. A lot of tools are either expense trackers or monthly budgets that assume clean month boundaries, which breaks down quickly if you’re paid biweekly or irregularly.

Envelope budgeting (the method) works by allocating money up front so future obligations are actually covered before spending happens. But the hard part is handling income timing and paycheck variability without overfunding the future.

Anyways, I’m currently adding a cash flow detection algorithm to Envelope (the budgeting app) https://envelopebudgeting.com that only allocates paychecks to obligations before the next paycheck unless future funding is strictly required. That approach has avoided a lot of timing edge cases I kept running into.

mizzaoyesterday at 4:30 AM

We're working on learning/pedagogy infrastructure that models the learner by using AI to build a knowledge graph: https://parsnips.notion.site/knowledge — this is in contrast to the common black-box approach of "use some RAG with a large context window and hope for the best".

In the above article, we list a few applications that we think this could be helpful for: life skills, management/sales training, personal coaching, etc. We'd love to demo the software if this sounds interesting to you!

abhishekbasuyesterday at 2:50 PM

Developing LogiModel AI (https://www.logimodel.com/) which is an agentic supply chain optimization engine that forecasts demand, optimizes operations, and simulates scenarios to reduce costs while keeping your network reliable and customers satisfied. It integrates seamlessly with your ERP and document repositories to learn your business context, then acts as an intelligent decision engine, freeing you to focus on strategy while it handles execution.

Always interested in possibilities of LLMs interfacing with MIP solvers.

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skykooleryesterday at 2:43 PM

I'm working on Lightningbeam (https://lightningbeam.org), an integrated multimedia editor. It's inspired mainly by Macromedia Flash, Apple GarageBand, and Kdenlive. It combines animation, audio and video editing into a single timeline. It's cross-platform, running natively on Linux, macOS and Windows.

I'm currently rewriting the UI in Rust - previously it had a Rust backend and a JS frontend using Tauri, but I ran into bandwidth limitations which prevented it from being really usable as a video editor. It's currently in early alpha.

kristjanyesterday at 7:55 PM

Sponder - Filter and transform RSS feeds or Podcasts (https://sponder.app)

Different RSS clients provide different filtering options, and lots of them limit you to a few keywords and/or put them behind a $7-12/mo subscription. I'm building Sponder so you can curate what you see, and it just presents another RSS feed, so you can keep using your favorite client but fill in the feature gaps.

Right now it can merge and filter by string or regex, and next I'm building (because it's what I want) history replay and smarter podcast rerun detection. it's new and I'm very open to feedback and feature requests.

packetedyesterday at 3:37 AM

I'm working on a website that lists veterinary practices owned by private equity or large corporations to help people make more informed decisions about where they take their pets. It started as a small passion project after our dog (who was sideswiped by a car) died at the hands of a vet practice recently acquired by private equity. We were billed over $13k for 2 days of care where his diagnosis and the opportunity to treat it was missed, there was zero continuity of care, no medical leadership and predatory billing practices.

The site has become quite a hit and gets thousands of unique visitors each day. https://www.privateequityvet.org/vet-list

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shatskyyesterday at 12:34 PM

https://github.com/shatsky/lightning-image-viewer

Tiny desktop (pre)viewer which displays image in transparent overlay without any UI, allowing to look into specific image detail with single hand move (zoom with scroll and pan with drag simultaneously like in map apps, with nothing but display borders limiting visible image surface) and toggle between file manager and image view almost instantly (close with left click anywhere/keyboard Enter).

Also finished initial rewrite in Rust just hours ago:) (originally did it in C and intentionally tried to make it initially close to preceding C codebase before going further, so many things are still managed manually)

tokioyoyoyesterday at 2:34 AM

Been bored a bit, so working on a Coop exploration app, already on AppStore - https://apps.apple.com/jp/app/ato-explore-together/id6757285....

Basically tracking where my friends and I have collectively been by dividing the global map into H3 hexagons. The using photo and workout metadata to get the locations, giving points and doing comparisons between everyone. It’s actually quite fun to see random people around the world sign up and see in the global map where everyone has been. Grounds me a bit haha.

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rorylaitilalast Sunday at 10:42 PM

A couple different projects. I've been cataloging and publishing my vintage ad collection at https://adretro.com. It's starting to get a lot of organic traffic after about a year online, which is cool.

I'm also working on a new strength gains-tracking app that is a lot more intuitive, motivating and friend first. I've been using it with some friends for the last 10 weeks and everyone making is consistent gains. It is my first full PWA, vanillaJs, backend is Lucee & MySQL. Works great on iOS and Android, no one has any complaints. The web stack has come a long way I am probably not going to do a native mobile app for a while. I'll probably make it public in a couple weeks.

techtalksweeklyyesterday at 7:32 AM

https://techtalksweekly.io/

I've been working on my newsletter called Tech Talks Weekly[1] where my readers get one email per week with all the latest Software Engineering conference talks and podcasts[1] published that week.

In January, I've released a paid tier[2] where my subscribers additionally get:

1. Access to my internal database of all the talks and podcasts since 2020 (+48,000 in total) where they can search, filter, sort, and group by title, conference/podcast, view count, date, and duration.

2. The list of the most-watched talks over the last 7, 30, 90 days, 6 months, and 12 months based on number of views.

3. Category-based view of new talks & podcasts by tech stack, language, and domain (Software Architecture, Backend, Frontend, Full Stack, Data, ML, DevOps, Security, Leadership and every major language & ecosystem)

[1] https://www.techtalksweekly.io/p/what-is-tech-talks-weekly

[2] https://plus.techtalksweekly.io/

indiehackermanyesterday at 8:54 PM

Making improvements to https://engineering.fyi/ - an aggregator for big tech blogs

Added summaries so readers can quickly see if it's worth reading the entire article e.g. https://engineering.fyi/article/towards-self-driving-codebas...

nicclyesterday at 8:22 PM

back working on my lighting desk, after a couple of years of hating it because the communications bus between the many different modules was flakey and so the whole thing wasn't fun to use. I bit the bullet last year and re-implemented everything with CAN-bus communications and it's actually fun to use now.

Current work has been improving boot time. Was nearly two minutes because of one board, and that's a long time for the lights to be out if you have to reboot during a show. I'd wanted to use buildroot to get a custom kernel that should boot much more quickly, but the buildroot learning curve was steep for me, particularly as I've no expectation of ever needing the knowledge again.

Independently but concurrently I decided I really ought to understand what all this AI stuff was about, for fear of getting left behind. That coincided with the release of opus 4.5, and holy heck has it made a difference! With a little guidance from me Claude got the buildroot environment working and the boot time down to less than 10 seconds. I've been _really_ impressed. I've had Claude write a few boring utilities that I could easily have done but Claude managed much faster and with less boredom on my part. Fortunately for my AI revolution I think I'm a better Business Analyst/writer than I am a coder, so it fits with my temperament.

raviisoccupiedyesterday at 6:31 PM

I have been working on a web app called Beval - Simple evaluations for your AI product.

In my day to day as a Product Manager working in a team that ships AI products, I often found myself wanting to do 'quick and dirty' LLM based evaluation on conversation transcripts and traces. I found myself blocked by 'Gemini in Google Sheets', it was too slow and cumbersome, and it didn't handle eval changes well. And because I was exploring, it wasn't helpful to try and set up something more robust with the team.

To fix the problem I eventually learned to call the OpenAI API in python, but I really felt that I wanted a 'product' to help me and potentially help others.

So this weekend I built https://beval.space

neyayesterday at 3:31 AM

Working on Design Flo - Generate enterprise grade software using natural language. We use 10 years of battle-tested patterns, not just LLMs. Deterministic logic where reliability, performance, and correctness matter most.

https://designflo.ai

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debbayesterday at 8:12 PM

https://github.com/debba/tabularis

I’m working on tabularis, a lightweight desktop database management tool designed for developers. It provides a modern interface for managing MySQL/MariaDB, PostgreSQL, and SQLite databases through a native desktop application. Built using Tauri v2 (Rust backend) and React 19 (TypeScript frontend), it offers native performance while maintaining the flexibility of web technologies.

FrankRay78yesterday at 7:18 PM

I’m building an AI emotional regulation coach for autism

Traditional therapy assumes you can identify what you’re feeling, which is exactly what many autistic people struggle with. Anna, the emotional regulation coach, addresses this dilemma.

I’ve used her daily for nearly a year and haven’t had a major dysregulation event since. Now I’m working on developing Anna further. The following post includes a detailed framework for building your own.

https://bettersoftware.uk/2026/01/24/how-to-build-ai-regulat...

bryanhoganyesterday at 4:53 AM

Recently on my blog: https://bryanhogan.com/blog

Currently in Shanghai but will move to Tokyo next week. Once I'm in Tokyo I'll publish a few posts about AI assisted coding and product creation.

Also adding a few things to my ideas page: https://bryanhogan.com/ideas

Other things I'm working on:

- https://dailyselftrack.com/ - Got into working on it again, mainly solving some UX problems currently.

- https://game.tolearnkorean.com/ - Learn Korean words quickly, words go from easy tasks (e.g.) matchings pairs) to more difficult ones (writting it), currently still needs some slight adjustments, and then I'll release an Android version.

- https://app.tolearnjapanese.com/ - Wanted to learn Hiragana quickly, used my existing project as a base to build this. Needs some adjustments as well, feedback is highly welcome.

- https://tolearnkorean.com/ - Since I'm learning Korean, and also working on an app to better learn Korean, I also want to make a guide on learning Korean, improving my own skills by teaching others.

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tunaofthelandyesterday at 3:30 PM

Couple of scratch-my-itch apps.

1. Plimsoll Line for dealing with anxieties from mountains of Reminder items, by surfacing the stress factors and taking small actions such as quick journalling and a breathing exercise. The new version with Widget should be released within the next week or two. Version 1 is currently in the iOS App Store. (https://apps.apple.com/us/app/calm-to-do-list-tasks-plimsoll... Calm To Do List&Tasks-Plimsoll). Made it to help my wife (and me!) not get so overwhelmed with things she has yet to do but hasn't started. Also to make it easy to write down things weighing heavy on her mind to alleviate the vicious cycle of emotional decay.

2. Yet-unnamed and -unreleased weather app for planning outdoor activities at times of the day when the weather will be most favorable (or least bad). Made it so that I can plan when to go out to the back yard to bring in more fire wood for the stove in my house. The weather has been tough this winter in the Northeastern US so it finally made me work on the app.

auayesterday at 7:04 PM

A pricing API for the Counter-Strike 2 market that provides real-time & historical data.

The market is distributed across a bunch of 3rd-party marketplaces, and there's no 'simple' API that provides genuinely high-quality data. It's been a super fun project, and I've been able to learn about collecting & managing a high (to me) scale of data, building an API from the ground-up, and creating my first 'commercial' website.

Website is @ https://cs2.sh/

The API is built w/ Go & Clickhouse, which I've been super impressed with so far.

Web design is partially inspired by turbopuffer's site.

adamos486yesterday at 12:57 AM

Skulto - offline-first package manager for Claude/Codex agent skills

https://github.com/asteroid-belt/skulto

Started building this after getting nervous about installing random SKILL.md files from GitHub. Scans for prompt injection in markdown/references and suspicious patterns in scripts/.

- 200+ curated skills included

- 33 supported agents

- Symlinks for one install anywhere and automatic updates

- CLI, TUI, or MCP interface: try asking Claude to find and add Awesome repos.

- Semantic search across skill content

Working on: local skill authoring, mise-style directory activation

Go + Bubble Tea. Happy to hear what's missing.

achllleyesterday at 5:24 PM

- A stair lift for stuff, not people. Retrofits onto any stairs and self-locks without damaging the stairs or blocking the path. Allows you to bring groceries, laundry, senior dogs up and down stairs with the push of a button. Currently can pull 50lbs.

- A bracelet with tiny camera that's pointed at your hand palm and transmits pictures of the stuff you're holding and where you've put it down locally to your phone. Pictures are sent to a quantized CLIP which allows you to search for anything you've lost without needing to attach an airtag to it. Works decently well and is great for 'power losers' like those with ADHD-I. Has a privacy slider and nothing goes to the cloud.

Would love to hear from anyone interested > hi @ hitch-home dot com

csummersyesterday at 1:09 PM

https://hot.dev

I'm building Hot Dev, a backend workflow platform.

- Hot: a functional, expression-based language w/ types for easy integrations and built-in parallel constructs

- Event Handlers drive execution `on-event: "user:created"`

- Scheduled Events `schedule: "every hour"`

- MCP: Turn any Hot function into an MCP Tool

- API: Real-time access to running tasks; subscribe to workflow Streams with SSE updates

- Observability: System-level dashboard; Call-level tracing; Alerts to email, Slack, PagerDuty, or webhook

- Develop locally, push to production with `hot deploy`

- Coming Soon: Hot Box - run any OCI container as a Hot function

gengstrandyesterday at 5:05 PM

I am working on an app that uses old-school predictive AI (i.e. pytorch and scikit-learn) to predict professional sports outcomes in a way that is useful for DFS fans. Here is the landing page.

https://www.higherscoresdfs.com/dfs/spa/welcome/

Here is the pitch.

We seek to empower DFS fans through education about predicting professional sports athlete outcomes. We do that through strategy advice, hot player tips, optimized lineups, and pick’em style game-friendly player props. We're not trying to take away your control or do your thinking for you. We are just here to support you in making better decisions. Let the app do the number crunching so you can get back to competitive play that gets results and is also fun.

ycombinatornewsyesterday at 2:54 AM

Learning the autonomous coding, there are so many different skills, tools and ways and only some of them seem to work.

That means I have to: - build something so I can evaluate the results. - track each of these projects separately otherwise they turn into dust after quite some time. Gladly claudesidian seems to be working well with the unstructured stream of inputs. Feel like hooking it up with some task tracker cli and calendar and notifications could make life a bit better too. - plan next projects to keep evaluating other skills and tools

It’s been discussed so many times the amount of new or personalized software that appears and will appear and it seems so true.

Whatever I built I am actively using myself - a text rewriter that cleans some of the AI speak and has MCP and cli (at https://www.refineo.app). Math teaching and solving extension at https://math.photos and a self hosted stock opportunity discovery tool that runs locally. This is just to automate what I did before manually and scale it up a bit.

> Any new ideas

There’s no product yet to cover the needs of all of us launching the software into the internet void. Any ad platform out there is a hot and very outdated mess and I just can’t. There is going to be a better way with all the capabilities we have and someone is going to really nail it.

alienonwingsyesterday at 1:01 PM

Been working on a Bluetooth based miniature range Locating tag that can be glued or stuck on to any object of choice. (think sometohing like an Airtag, but 1/10th the size and working on Android and way cheaper) The need arose when my old parents kept forgetting where they last left their spectacles. Since I am a electronics and hardware engineer by profession, I am looking for some expertise on app building for his project. Maybe I will turn to an AI assistant for this. I am working on a blog seriaes for his to record my environmental progress. Will be up in a few weeks.

pikeryesterday at 9:08 AM

Tritum, the cross-platform IDE for legal work: https://tritium.legal

`brew install tritium` (macOS)

`winget install tritium` (Windows)

`curl -f https://tritium.legal/get | sh` (linux)

Check it for free out and let us know your thoughts!

yodakohlyesterday at 7:02 PM

Building PushMe: A service that sends you notifications for anything you care about.

I was wasting way to much time scrolling news. It consist of a crawling engine, de-duplication, llm creating a custom keyword filter and each event is checked against the original prompt for verification using a llm before sending it out.

Keywords suck, 381 of 388 potential matches end up like this:

"The event is about an OpenClaw Plugin Hub supply chain attack, not a data breach affecting hundreds of millions of users. The watch request specifies a massive data breach; the event does not clearly indicate that."

[https://pushme.site]

brendoncarrollyesterday at 2:00 PM

I'm working on Got, version control like Git, but for files and directories of any size and E2E encrypted.

https://github.com/gotvc/got

Got is built on Blobcache, which is a general-purpose transactional storage layer and E2E encrypted backend.

https://blobcache.io

https://github.com/blobcache/blobcache

marcusdevlast Sunday at 11:14 PM

I've been working on a tool to solve a problem I keep seeing at my day job when handling large-scale deployments and migrations. The “plan” is always scattered across internal docs, spreadsheets, and Slack threads. Coordinating work across multiple teams becomes messy fast

So I'm building Taskplan (https://taskplan.run) - it's like Ansible, but for people. Build a plan, assign tasks to people or teams, and get a real-time dashboard to track progress as the work happens.

I'd love feedback from anyone who deals with the same issues or works on ops-heavy projects.

ivanjermakovyesterday at 12:18 AM

Just finished "WebGPU path tracer in two weeks" to better understand the benefits of WebGPU over WebGL and generate some pleasing 3D scenes right in the browser. https://github.com/ivanjermakov/moonlight

rmonvferyesterday at 12:23 AM

https://agentmode.co

Hosted OpenClaw, one click and you get a full agent with configurable skills, channels and the whole thing, all running in its own sandbox.

I love OpenClaw but setting it up is a pain: VPS, Docker, API keys in plaintext, security patches... So I’ve spent the last couple weeks building a hosted version that handles all of that. Each user gets their own isolated environment on Cloudflare Workers.

Still doing some testing with friends before opening signups but planning to launch properly this week.

Would love feedback on the landing page in the meantime!

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barrelllast Sunday at 8:06 PM

Visually I’m working on a new landing page for phrasing. It’s almost done, just need to record a few videos: https://phrasing.app/next

Behind the scenes I’m rebuilding the sync engine to properly support offline mode. Trying to get to instant opens for the app (and of course work offline). It’s probably my 5th sync engine. It’s been really fun to see how much easier, faster, better, etc each new iteration is.

(And the project at large is https://phrasing.app - a language learning app for polyglots. It’s like anki but designed to be enjoyed)

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zahlmanlast Sunday at 7:50 PM

> What are you working on?

Myself, mostly. Trying to wrestle with realizing how much time I've not been spending on my supposedly main project[1] and questioning whether it's really worth doing.

> Any new ideas that you're thinking about?

Way too many. Writing todo lists is part of working on myself.

[1]: PAPER, a pure-Python ~(pip/pipx replacement), from scratch with an emphasis on simplicity and elegance. https://github.com/zahlman/paper . There's more locally that I haven't pushed, including factoring some stuff out into a separate project and planning more of the same. But yeah.

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enagymoyesterday at 11:36 AM

Cascade Puzzle, a daily puzzle game inspired by Panel de Pon / Tetris Attack. Swap blocks horizontally to match 3+, trigger chain reactions, clear the board in limited moves.

I originally started this years ago and abandoned it because puzzle generation was hard and I didn't have the proper time to finish it. Picked it back up recently with Claude Code and finally cracked it, the generator uses backward construction (starts solved, reverses moves) so every puzzle is guaranteed solvable.

3 daily puzzles (Easy/Medium/Hard), shareable results like Wordle, no account needed.

https://cascadepuzzle.com

leroyalcheeseyesterday at 2:25 PM

For almost 1 year now, we've been building on a next gen event-driven internal developer platform, an an opinionated selfhosted platform "shoehorn.dev" - deploy with ease within 15 min (docker compose or helmcharts). You could say its a modern backstage. But its way smarter in many ways. Kubernetes native, API first, microservice golang backend architecture. You will be able to configure the platform via our terraform provider too. Deploy our kubernetes-push-agent in your cluster, push kinds and auto creates entities into the API in batches, get podEvents etc. Modular frontend written in svelte, decide what you want to show. We're supporting oidc + orgdata sync for okta, zitadel, entraID. rbac management. Instant search using meillisearch. Auto create orgchart depending on how your teams / deparments are nested. Visualize dependencies "relations" using svelteflow. View entity compliance. Full github integration. widget/integration community etc.

Would love feedback!

https://demo.shoehorn.dev will be deployed soon and full release "beta" will be released in march.

https://registry.terraform.io/providers/shoehorn-dev/shoehor... https://github.com/shoehorn-dev https://shoehorn.dev/

Feel free to reach out, [email protected]

antoferrayesterday at 6:55 PM

Building TimeCap: an app that removes the addictive sections of any social media. That means that you can check your friends' updates on Instagram without getting distracted by reels.

It is fully customizable, works on any social media, and it genuinely brought my screen time to less than 1 hour.

It is free to use for one platform, and is $29.99/yr for unlimited. And if you need the premium version but can't afford it, just send me a message and I'll sort you out.

App Store link: https://apps.apple.com/us/app/id6737515680

leleatyesterday at 9:05 AM

https://github.com/Leleat/git-forge

From the README: "[git-forge is a] simple CLI tool for basic interactions with issues and pull requests across GitHub, GitLab, Gitea, and Forgejo".

Right now, I am looking into better testing. Currently, I do testing by mocking the forge APIs and then running git-forge against them with TypeScript. But not everything is testable that way. The TUI is pretty much untested. So I now want to port at least the tests to Rust (I am probably gonna leave the mock API in TS) and need to look into how to tests TUIs, which is a bit of a challenge since not only is Rust my first "systems programming language", I am also not knowledgable in Terminal/TUIs...

nickwrbyesterday at 8:00 PM

Currently building https://auth-email.com

Many mainstream email providers have switched to require OAuth for login, but there are tons of clients and apps that don’t (or can’t) support OAuth.

Auth-Email is a secure, private relay that takes out the need to worry about OAuth: authorize mail accounts one time in our dashboard, then use an ordinary username and password for IMAP, POP, and SMTP via our server.

nozzlegearyesterday at 12:01 AM

I'm working on publishing a big update to my open source .NET project, ShopifySharp. I recently finished a custom graphql query builder generator (written in some sloppy F#) which will be included in the next release, which means all of the types, queries and mutations in Shopify's graphql schema will have a matching fluent-style query builder in ShopifySharp.

Aiming to get that published in the next day or two, and then I plan on diving in on a complete rewrite of the book I wrote on building Shopify apps with .NET and C#. It's long overdue, the book still uses Shopify's deprecated rest API and some methods that aren't supported anymore, but I've been holding off on an update until I could rewrite it with the new fluent query builders in ShopifySharp.

Outside of my OSS stuff, I'm continuing working on my SaaS app, Stages (https://getstages.com) [¹], which has been paying my mortgage and bills. Customers have been asking for lots of features lately and I'm anxious to get a particular one finished (filtering orders and events before they come in and are saved to the app) soon. It's my biggest source of churn right now.

[¹] Elevator pitch: the app is like a pizza tracker for your orders that have a custom or long, drawn out production process. Your staff and customers can see exactly where an order is in the process without calling or emailing you. Shopify only for now but one of main dev goals is to move beyond Shopify.

vulkoingimyesterday at 8:48 AM

Built my own Spotify recommendation egnine after getting tired of Spotify’s repetitive recommendations.

You get to choose the genres you're interested in, and it creates playlists from the music in your library. They get updated every day - think a better, curated by you version of the Daily Mixes. You can add some advanced filters as well, if you really want to customise what music you'll get.

It works best if you follow a good amount of artists. Optionally you can get recommendations from artists that belong to playlists you follow or you've created - if you don't follow much or any artists, then you should enable that in order for the service to be useful.

https://riffradar.org/

cijuyesterday at 4:56 AM

https://finbodhi.com — It's a personal finance app. It helps you track, understand, benchmark and plan your finances - with double-entry accounting. *You own* your financial data. It’s local-first, syncs across devices, and everything’s encrypted in transit (we do have your email for subscription tracking and analytics). Supports multiple-accounts (track as a family or even as an advisor), multi-currency, a custom sheet/calculator to operate on your accounts (calculate taxes etc) and much more.

Most recently, we added support for benchmarking (create custom dashboards tracking nav and value chart of subsets of your portfolio) and us stocks, etfs etc.

I wrote about benchmarking here: https://finbodhi.com/docs/blog/benchmark-scenarios

NOTE: you can try demo without signup, but it doesn't work in Firefox Incognito mode.

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tifa2upyesterday at 12:11 PM

https://agentset.ai/

Open-source RAG infrastructure.Every team I talk to has the same experience: RAG works in the demo, breaks in production.

We handle ingestion through retrieval with optimizations baked in. 97.9% on HotpotQA vs 88.8% for standard RAG. Model-agnostic, 22+ file types, built-in citations, MCP server. MIT licensed.

https://github.com/agentset-ai/agentset

_leoyesterday at 1:46 PM

Built this (well, forked and adapted) this morning: https://github.com/leochatain/zsh-claude-code-shell

Couple of utilities for using claude code in my zsh. #? <describe command> => generates the command for you #?? <command> => explains the command for you

Packaged as an oh-my-zsh plugin so it's easy to use.

absoluteunit1yesterday at 7:21 PM

Building https://typequicker.com

We’re aiming to build the best typing application; personalized to every users typing habits.

Typing is one of the most important hard skills today and yet most education systems skip it.

Most of our customers are adults who always wanted to type but can’t find the time. We make it faster to learn and improve by focusing around the user’s weak points (with our features like SmartPractice and TargetPractice)

blampackyesterday at 7:39 PM

I'm working on https://videoreject.com

Video Reject is a platform for people to buy/sell physical media. Like Reverb but for physical media.

I love movies and wanted an excuse build something in that world. Its not necessarily groundbreaking, but I think it could build a nice community of folks with the same interests.

We're getting ready to launch, but in the meantime, we have a waitlist up.

spennantyesterday at 3:48 PM

Fine tuning Gemini 2.5 flash on EVM Blockchain execution structures and using perplexity with PageRank to perform transaction anomaly detection. https://lite.chaingenius.ai/theory

[SMILES](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simplified_Molecular_Input_Lin...) or [SELFIES](https://resources.wolframcloud.com/PacletRepository/resource...), but for EVM Blockchain executions.

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