heya
Huginn
heya | Huginn | |
---|---|---|
2 | 121 | |
720 | 41,598 | |
1.1% | 1.5% | |
7.8 | 8.2 | |
4 days ago | 1 day ago | |
Ruby | 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.
heya
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Are there built in Ruby-tools to help you code out and monitor CRM-like workflows (e.g. upon action X, event Y will trigger in 5 days, and event Z in 15 days, etc). Need something that a user can monitor on a console.
Depending on the actions you have in mind, the heya gem by u/joshuap may support your use case.
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Caffeinate: A Rails engine for scheduled email sequences
While there were solutions to this problem when I first committed code — Heya and Dripper are both active — they both didn't sit right with my more complex workflows, or I just didn't like the design.
Huginn
- Create agents that monitor and act on your behalf
- IFTTT is killing its pay-what-you-want Legacy Pro plan
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Pipe Dreams: The life and times of Yahoo Pipes
I skipped to chapter 9 in the article ("Clogged"), and it looked like Pipes failed because it didn't have a large enough team or a well-defined mission. As a result they couldn't offer a super robust product that would lure in enterprise users. "You could not purchase some number of guaranteed-to-work Pipes calls per month" is the quote from the article.
The reason I think that interesting is because that's the model these days for everything from AI tokens to Monday.com seats. It makes me feel like Pipes was before its time.
That said I've been collecting different "business glue" products that are similar to Pipes. To me, like you say, they aren't as interesting, exciting and intuitive as Pipes was, but maybe it just takes a little more digging. I tried to focus on open source tools but some aren't.
- n8n io: https://n8n.io/integrations/mondaycom/
- Node-RED: https://nodered.org/ (just read about this one in this thread)
- trigger dev: trigger.dev
- automatisch.io: https://automatisch.io/docs/
- Activepieces: https://www.activepieces.com/docs/getting-started/introducti...
- Huginn: https://github.com/huginn/huginn
- budibase: https://budibase.com/
- windmill: https://www.windmill.dev/
- tooljet: https://www.tooljet.com/workflows
- Bracket: https://www.usebracket.com/pricing (just SalesForce <-> PostgreSQL)
- Zapier: zapier.com/
Anyway I hope some of these are fun!
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Ask HN: What is the correct way to deal with pipelines?
"correct" is a value judgement that depends on lots of different things. Only you can decide which tool is correct. Here are some ideas:
- https://camel.apache.org/
- https://www.windmill.dev/
- https://github.com/huginn/huginn
Your idea about a queue (in redis, or postgres, or sqlite, etc) is also totally valid. These off-the-shelf tools I listed probably wouldn't give you a huge advantage IMO.
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Are you using Huginn? If so do you have any latest documentation?
Huginn (https://github.com/huginn/huginn) has like some 39K stars on Github and the use cases it covered looks good.
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Generate RSS feed for any website using CSS selectors
Huginn is an another useful tool that allows you to wrangle CSS selectors and XPath nodes to create RSS feeds.
I use it quite successfully to get data out of undocumented APIs and out into RSS.
https://github.com/huginn/huginn
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What web scrapers do you recommend.
I know of Huginn that could be usefull depending on what you want to do.
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Any recommendations for a open source replacement for If This Then That?
https://github.com/huginn/huginn ??
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Looking for a web scrapper to detect changes to a webpage on a schedule
Huginn
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LLM Powered Autonomous Agents
"not a single word about the safety implications of such a system"
Oh please. Not everything has to be regulated-to-hells before a use case is even found on this. Autonomous agents have existed for decades.
If it can automate agents like huginn[0] with natural language, I'd be very happy. Autonomous agents doesn't mean it's going to take over the world autonomously. Let's lower the fearmongering a bit.
[0]: https://github.com/huginn/huginn
What are some alternatives?
noticed - Notifications for Ruby on Rails applications
Node RED - Low-code programming for event-driven applications
caffeinate - A Rails engine for drip campaigns/scheduled sequences and periodical support. Works with ActionMailer, and other things.
n8n - Free and source-available fair-code licensed workflow automation tool. Easily automate tasks across different services.
ruleby - the Rules Engine for Ruby
Beehive - A flexible event/agent & automation system with lots of bees 🐝
dripper - An opinionated rails drip email engine that depends on ActiveRecord and ActionMailer
Home Assistant - :house_with_garden: Open source home automation that puts local control and privacy first.
RSS-Bridge - The RSS feed for websites missing it
changedetection.io - The best and simplest free open source web page change detection, website watcher, restock monitor and notification service. Restock Monitor, change detection. Designed for simplicity - Simply monitor which websites had a text change for free. Free Open source web page change detection, Website defacement monitoring, Price change notification
openHAB - Add-ons for openHAB 1.x
RSS Merger - Powerfull PHP aggregator of RSS feeds