go-live
rps-scala
Our great sponsors
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.
go-live
-
Ask HN: Show me your Half Baked project
Created a shell utility in Go, called go-live. The idea is that you start it in a directory, and then those files are immediately hosted on the network.
The core idea is to be as lightweight and performant as possible, and to do one thing only and well - Unix style.
https://github.com/antsankov/go-live
Looking for contributors and feedback on it.
-
Announcing the 1.0 release of go-live, an ultra lightweight/performant (4mb compiled) static-site and file server.
Checkout: https://github.com/antsankov/go-live#todo-help-wanted
-
1.0 release of go-live: An ultra light (4mb compiled) Go site and file server
Linux: ```snap install go-live```
Checkout the Github for more info on how to install it: https://github.com/antsankov/go-live#install and interesting use cases.
Any feedback is appreciated, since this is the first open-source Unix utility I've worked on! Also need some help on profiling it.
rps-scala
- Ask HN: What is something you built but never marketed?
-
Ask HN: Show me your Half Baked project
I've been working for some time on a capture the flag web game called Rock Paper Scissor Battle!, which is basically a simplified version of Stratego, but the pieces are rock, paper and scissor instead of numbers). Its open source on my Github: https://github.com/daniel-bytes/rps-scala, the backend is Scala and Redis and the frontend React + Typescript. I have a live version of it up at http://rock-paper-scissor-battle.com/, although I have a feeling any real level of traffic will topple over my $5/mo Heroku dyno. Also don't mind the goofy font landing page. :)
I'm overall happy with the backend code, except for the "AI", which can use some real work and research. Right now just some basic semi-random rules that make it pretty easy to beat.
What are some alternatives?
AI-basketball-analysis - :basketball::robot::basketball: AI web app and API to analyze basketball shots and shooting pose.
hof - Framework that joins data models, schemas, code generation, and a task engine. Language and technology agnostic.
meross-local-mqtt - A pyscript-based management of Meross devices connected to a local MQTT broker
keyAlarm - An alarm that prevents you from typing too much.
vz - Create virtual machines and run Linux-based operating systems in Go using Apple Virtualization.framework.
pastty - Copy and paste across devices
tuna-lang
pegao - Pegao is a community about lists of links on topics of interest.
hacn - A "monad" or DSL for creating React components using Fable and F# computation expressions
logsuck - Easy log aggregation, indexing and searching
observable-state-tree - An observable state tree is a normal object except that listeners can be bound to any subtree of the state tree.