runbox7
builder
runbox7 | builder | |
---|---|---|
3 | 16 | |
124 | 6,666 | |
0.0% | 1.3% | |
8.9 | 9.8 | |
about 18 hours ago | 6 days ago | |
TypeScript | TypeScript | |
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.
runbox7
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Ask HN: What email client do you prefer?
I've only ever worked at places with self hosted Exchange for e-mail and groupware. As a client, I use Outlook Web Access (OWA) most of the time and I think it's fine. It's simple, feels reasonably snappy to me and I like having the same interface on all the different machines I need to login from. Sometimes, I need to reach for the desktop version of Outlook in a Windows VM to access options or features not accessible in OWA (or in the sluggish abomination that is Outlook for Mac). However, in the end I don't care all that much about my e-mail client because I use a simple inbox-zero-ish approach to e-mail and only really need Inbox and Archive folders (as well as a delete function). This works with every client.
To have an offline archive, I also have Apple Mail connected to my Exchange accounts. I never use the app itself but frequently use Spotlight to search for and preview e-mails. However, if I'm already working in OWA, I use the search function in there. In my experience, it works well and doesn't feel significantly slower than searching locally in my offline archive.
[Sidenote: I find it annoying to have to use Spotlight for local e-mail search instead of Alfred.app (which has been my universal search app for many years). Alas, Apple only allows access to the e-mail folder on MacOS for their own apps for some annoying reason these days.]
Outside of work, I have the same setup with Apple Mail and Spotlight for archival and search. As clients, I use K-9 on Android and Apple Mail or runbox7 on the desktop. The latter is the webmail app of Runbox, my e-mail provider of choice (I think the app is pretty good - and open source on https://github.com/runbox/runbox7 ).
- Any good Google Calendar alternative?
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What is a good alternative to gmail?
I wouldn't call this the "best" option. "Best" is tied to a specific case, and OP's case isn't clear to me. I've self-hosted my mail for ~5 years, and I moved on to runbox.com now. Not expensive, cheaply hosted with green energy in Norway and their web UI is free software.
builder
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Introducing GPT Crawler - Turn Any Site Into a Custom GPT With Just a URL
I created my first custom GPT based on the Builder.io docs site, forum, and example projects on github and it can now answer detailed questions with code snippets about integrating Builder.io into your site or app. You can try it here (currently requires a paid ChatGPT plan).
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5 Open Source Tools for your Ecommerce Stacks
Check out Builder.io’s GitHub repository for more details about its features and community.
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Stop polyfilling fetch in your npm package
I’ve maintained a handful of JavaScript SDKs over the years. And for each one, the question of how exactly to provide support for fetch in a Node environment inevitably comes up. In fact, we just recently had to resolve some issues concerning this in our Builder.io SDKs.
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How to develop webs %100 faster
16) https://github.com/builderio/builder
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UI React Tool
Personally, I would reach for builderIO's React SDK. It's pretty simple to set up and allows you to specify a selection of your own components.
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My idea already exists with a huge open source community backing the project. Should I invest my time in the same idea? [Help needed]
Yes, It is. Builder Github. I think you might have mistaken them for their premium services.
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I am about to re-write WordPress in Node.js
Hmm, I guess it really depends on where you want to go. If you want a basic editor, sure, write your own, but I see you're integrating rows and columns. If you want to match current UX expectations, you gonna spend a shit ton of time to add things like drag and drop ordering, color and spacing controls, etc. If you want to have a full blown editing experience, I'd check out sth. like https://builder.io/ or https://craft.js.org/
- Builder: Drag and drop page builder and CMS for React, Vue, Angular, and more
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How we cut 99% of our JavaScript with Qwik + Partytown
We’re excited to announce that the builder.io homepage now achieves a 100/100 score on PageSpeed Insights, even on mobile, since we adopted Qwik.
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What jamstack would you use and why?
The founders of builder.io are actively involved and have the right mindset. Swell.is also checks all the boxes and I am happy to bet on these two horses.
What are some alternatives?
iptvnator - :tv: Cross-platform IPTV player application with multiple features, such as support of m3u and m3u8 playlists, favorites, TV guide, TV archive/catchup and more.
plasmic - Visual builder for React. Build apps, websites, and content. Integrate with your codebase.
generator-ngx-rocket - :rocket: Extensible Angular 14+ enterprise-grade project generator
vue-draggable-next - Vue 3 drag-and-drop component
wasup - A zero-dependency, isomorphic library for emitting WebAssembly
angular-email-editor - Drag-n-Drop Email Editor Component for Angular
Simple-Calendar - A simple calendar with events, tasks, customizable colors, widgets and no ads.
partytown - Relocate resource intensive third-party scripts off of the main thread and into a web worker. 🎉
ownCloud - :cloud: ownCloud web server core (Files, DAV, etc.)
react-notion - A fast React renderer for Notion pages
FairEmail - Fully featured, open source, privacy friendly email app for Android
faustjs - Faust.js™ - The Headless WordPress Framework