Open-Source-Ruby-and-Rails-Apps
Feedbin
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Open-Source-Ruby-and-Rails-Apps | Feedbin | |
---|---|---|
7 | 36 | |
893 | 3,386 | |
- | 0.9% | |
4.9 | 9.0 | |
about 1 month ago | 3 days ago | |
Ruby | ||
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
Open-Source-Ruby-and-Rails-Apps
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I need advice after getting hired as an employee but here is the twist, I have zero ruby/ror knowledge nor experience.
I'd suggest picking an open source repo and giving yourself a very simple task, like changing some text on a specific page, doubling up every row in some data-driven table, something like that. It doesn't have to be sensible, it just has to be something that forces you to learn
- Which websites did you guys known that are made with rails and are open-source?
- Where can i find free or open source rails web applications?
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Ask HN: Interactive way to learn Ruby on Rails?
If you love doing hands-on project, I recommend you to look at the existing awesome Rails app. You will learn a lot, and learn what matters.
I already make a tons of awesome Ruby on Rails list here;
https://github.com/asyraffff/Open-Source-Ruby-and-Rails-Apps
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Rails 7 : an (imagined) preview
I also found this kind of list here on GitHub.
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Awesome Ruby and Rails Open Source applications [V2]
Check this new version 🔥.
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Open Source Real-world Ruby and Rails Applications 🔥
Here we go 🚀.
Feedbin
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Show HN: ADHD STASH. A curated collection of ADHD friendly products and services
It would work the same for me, if only because I'd redirect the email to my RSS reader (via Feedbin[0] or Kill the Newsletter[1] or similar)! I suspect most people who care about RSS would do the same, but the Webflow docs[2] show it being pretty straightforward to set up, and (imo) it's an easy backup hedge against all your comms getting stuck in spam filters. Plus, it just feels more ADHD-friendly to me to reduce ping noise as much as possible.
- Killed by Google
- At its peak, Google Reader had 30M users but no executive support
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Reddit API Changes, Subreddit Blackout, and How It Affects You
I use Feedbin to read them. Because of their open nature nobody can tell the sole developer there “people can only read feeds using our app, and you can go pound sand”.
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Web browser-based RSS reader
Comes to my mind one that I bumped into a while ago: Feedbin, although I haven't tried it. It's web based and it costs $5/month but it has a 30 day trial period. It works also through third party apps on Android and iOS (well, the latter seems to have a dedicated one by themselves).
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Pick of the Day - 4/23/23 (Sunday)
There’s a RSS feed which you can use with something like feedbin.com
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Mac Power Users 686: Consuming Content in 2023
Links and Show Notes:More Power Users: Ad-free episodes with regular bonus segmentsSubmit FeedbackApple Releases iOS and iPadOS 16.4 with New Emoji, Notifications for Web Apps on the Home Screen, Voice Isolation for Cellular Calls, New Shortcuts Actions, and More - MacStoriesReadwiseKindle ScribeAmazon.com: How to Calm Your Mind by Chris BaileyMac Power Users #550: The World of RSS - Relay FMReadwise ReaderReeder 5FeedbinSubscribe to Email Newsletters in FeedbinGoodLinksThe Disney Bundle: Stream Disney+, Hulu, and ESPN+YouTube TVJustWatch AppCuriosity StreamYouTube PremiumCGP Grey - YouTubeHands-On With Apple's New Classical Music App - MacRumorsOvercastLibbyThree Thoughts Spurred by a Random iOS 5 Screenshot – 512 PixelsStephen Hackett (@[email protected]) - eworld.socialMacSparky (@[email protected]) - MastodonSofa: Downtime Organizer
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Google Reader shut down announced ten years ago today
I can recommend https://feedbin.com/ as a great replacement. It's $50 a year, but in return you get a service that is rock solid with an owner who is luckily very good in >> not << implementing features: no feature creep, no breaking changes, no BS.
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Why does no one talk about RSS readers?
I enjoy using Feedbin, as it's not only my own newsfeed for blogs, but it also supports Twitter too. The interface has a clean, thoughtful design which is really important for me.
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Weekly Self-Hosted Poll: Which RSS feed reader/aggregator are you using?
I no longer self host it, but there is a community contributed Docker Compose stack for Feedbin.
What are some alternatives?
PropertyWebBuilder - Create a fully featured real estate website on Rails in minutes! ⛺
NewsBlur - NewsBlur is a personal news reader that brings people together to talk about the world. A new sound of an old instrument.
dependabot-core - 🤖 Dependabot's core logic for creating update PR's.
Miniflux - Minimalist and opinionated feed reader
chaskiq - A full featured Live Chat, Support & Marketing platform, alternative to Intercom, Drift, Crisp, etc from cience.com
FreshRSS - A free, self-hostable news aggregator…
RubyGems - The Ruby community's gem hosting service.
Winds - A Beautiful Open Source RSS & Podcast App Powered by Getstream.io
view_component - A framework for building reusable, testable & encapsulated view components in Ruby on Rails.
FeedHQ - FeedHQ is a web-based feed reader
CodeTriage - Discover the best way to get started contributing to Open Source projects
CommaFeed - Google Reader inspired self-hosted RSS reader.