Crosspost! Publishing to Dev.to From My Personal Blog

This page summarizes the projects mentioned and recommended in the original post on dev.to

Nutrient - The #1 PDF SDK Library
Bad PDFs = bad UX. Slow load times, broken annotations, clunky UX frustrates users. Nutrient’s PDF SDKs gives seamless document experiences, fast rendering, annotations, real-time collaboration, 100+ features. Used by 10K+ devs, serving ~half a billion users worldwide. Explore the SDK for free.
nutrient.io
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CodeRabbit: AI Code Reviews for Developers
Revolutionize your code reviews with AI. CodeRabbit offers PR summaries, code walkthroughs, 1-click suggestions, and AST-based analysis. Boost productivity and code quality across all major languages with each PR.
coderabbit.ai
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  1. unocss

    The instant on-demand atomic CSS engine.

    I'm also considering rewriting the application with a framework like Nuxt or adding UnoCSS styles, just to play around with the technology and see what I can do. Hexo feels like it's not quite ready for production use in an enterprise context, but it's really straightforward to get up and running with for smaller groups and solo developers.

  2. Nutrient

    Nutrient - The #1 PDF SDK Library. Bad PDFs = bad UX. Slow load times, broken annotations, clunky UX frustrates users. Nutrient’s PDF SDKs gives seamless document experiences, fast rendering, annotations, real-time collaboration, 100+ features. Used by 10K+ devs, serving ~half a billion users worldwide. Explore the SDK for free.

    Nutrient logo
  3. hexo-generator-feed

    Feed generator for Hexo.

    My website is a static site built with Hexo and served through GitHub Pages. Hexo's documentation isn't the best, but with a little digging, I found that, in the years since I last used it, they've provided a pretty robust first-party plugin for generating RSS and ATOM feeds.

  4. github-action-feed-to-social-media

    Discontinued Post latest RSS feed item to social media (Mastodon, Twitter, Discord, Slack, Bluesky...)

    There may even be a pretty reasonable solution using GitHub actions, given this project from @lwojcik/github-action-feed-to-social-media, which allows for posting to platforms like Mastodon and Discord as well.

  5. github-calendar

    :bar_chart: Embed your GitHub calendar everywhere.

    [ ] Embed this GitHub contributions tracker on the site.

  6. MathDIY

    Democracy (D) and Internet (I) are Yours. MathDIY is a simple mathematical notation for describing business and political decision making, capturing its motivation, tensions and context.

    This is good for now, but I'd also like to see if I can connect to other platforms, like LinkedIn and the site formerly known as Twitter.

  7. three.js

    JavaScript 3D Library.

    [ ] Polishing the website's landing page (maybe with some 3D illustrations... looking at you Three.js)

  8. pages-gem

    A simple Ruby Gem to bootstrap dependencies for setting up and maintaining a local Jekyll environment in sync with GitHub Pages

    My website is a static site built with Hexo and served through GitHub Pages. Hexo's documentation isn't the best, but with a little digging, I found that, in the years since I last used it, they've provided a pretty robust first-party plugin for generating RSS and ATOM feeds.

  9. CodeRabbit

    CodeRabbit: AI Code Reviews for Developers. Revolutionize your code reviews with AI. CodeRabbit offers PR summaries, code walkthroughs, 1-click suggestions, and AST-based analysis. Boost productivity and code quality across all major languages with each PR.

    CodeRabbit logo
  10. nuxt

    The Intuitive Vue Framework.

    I'm also considering rewriting the application with a framework like Nuxt or adding UnoCSS styles, just to play around with the technology and see what I can do. Hexo feels like it's not quite ready for production use in an enterprise context, but it's really straightforward to get up and running with for smaller groups and solo developers.

  11. Hexo

    A fast, simple & powerful blog framework, powered by Node.js.

    My website is a static site built with Hexo and served through GitHub Pages. Hexo's documentation isn't the best, but with a little digging, I found that, in the years since I last used it, they've provided a pretty robust first-party plugin for generating RSS and ATOM feeds.

NOTE: The number of mentions on this list indicates mentions on common posts plus user suggested alternatives. Hence, a higher number means a more popular project.

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