Hacktoberfest2021

Top 23 Hacktoberfest2021 Open-Source Projects

  • fastlane

    🚀 The easiest way to automate building and releasing your iOS and Android apps

  • Project mention: Supercharge Your Mobile Dev Skills: 10 Essential Tools for Max Efficiency | dev.to | 2024-01-14

    Fastlane: For mobile development, Fastlane is an automation tool that can automate the building and releasing of iOS and Android apps.

  • cheat.sh

    the only cheat sheet you need

  • Project mention: Show HN: Cheat.sh Client | news.ycombinator.com | 2024-04-06
  • InfluxDB

    Power Real-Time Data Analytics at Scale. Get real-time insights from all types of time series data with InfluxDB. Ingest, query, and analyze billions of data points in real-time with unbounded cardinality.

    InfluxDB logo
  • linkedin-skill-assessments-quizzes

    Full reference of LinkedIn answers 2023 for skill assessments (aws-lambda, rest-api, javascript, react, git, html, jquery, mongodb, java, Go, python, machine-learning, power-point) linkedin excel test lösungen, linkedin machine learning test LinkedIn test questions and answers

  • Project mention: Tell HN: The Turing.com hiring platform is complete nonsense | news.ycombinator.com | 2024-01-11

    Been spending a bunch of time trying to get on their hiring platform. After a bunch of surveys on soft skills, assessments for selected tech stacks are required to receive job opportunities.

    It seems like the assessment tests are written by a machine and/or scraped entirely from questions in online repositories.

    As an example, here's a screenshot of one of their nonsense questions for an Android assessment: https://prnt.sc/waKVQjFoETwr

    Almost all the questions are like that. I also figured out that a bunch of the questions seem to be copied word for word from online repositories like https://github.com/Ebazhanov/linkedin-skill-assessments-quizzes/blob/main/android/android-quiz.md.

    Tried to speak to a person about all the issues which make taking an assessment impossible, and just got more bots.

    I'm sure many are looking for jobs, so figured this would save people a bunch of time.

  • transfer.sh

    Easy and fast file sharing from the command-line.

  • Project mention: GitHub issues from top Open Source Golang Repositories that you should contribute to | dev.to | 2024-01-15

    Transfer.sh - Option to user a CLI

  • bootstrap-table

    An extended table to integration with some of the most widely used CSS frameworks. (Supports Bootstrap, Semantic UI, Bulma, Material Design, Foundation, Vue.js)

  • Project mention: blazor with bootstrap and what is different bootstrap-table. | /r/Blazor | 2023-06-06

    but...I don't know what is different Bootstrap 5.x.x inside table and bootstrap-table(https://bootstrap-table.com/).

  • earthly

    Super simple build framework with fast, repeatable builds and an instantly familiar syntax – like Dockerfile and Makefile had a baby.

  • Project mention: Cache is King: A guide for Docker layer caching in GitHub Actions | news.ycombinator.com | 2024-04-07

    Also CACHE keyword, for cache mounts. Makes incremental tools like compilers work well in the context of dockerfiles and layer caches.

    That can extend beyond just producing docker iamges as well. Under the covers the CACHE keyword is how lib/rust in Earthly makes building Rust artifacts in CI faster.

    https://github.com/earthly/earthly/issues/1399

  • vue-material

    Vue.js Framework - ready-to-use Vue components with Material Design, free forever.

  • Project mention: Can Notion be efficient for my Design system's documentation? | /r/UI_Design | 2023-12-08

    For what it’s worth, these are (Vue-compatible) component libraries we had looked at, besides Google’s own: https://primevue.org/uikit. https://athemes.com/collections/vue-ui-component-libraries/ https://js.devexpress.com/Documentation/Guide/Vue_Components/DevExtreme_Vue_Components/ https://www.telerik.com/kendo-vue-ui https://www.creative-tim.com/vuematerial https://vuetifyjs.com https://element-plus.org/ https://www.naiveui.com/en-US/light

  • WorkOS

    The modern identity platform for B2B SaaS. The APIs are flexible and easy-to-use, supporting authentication, user identity, and complex enterprise features like SSO and SCIM provisioning.

    WorkOS logo
  • resty

    Simple HTTP and REST client library for Go

  • bit

    Bit is a modern Git CLI (by chriswalz)

  • Infosec_Reference

    An Information Security Reference That Doesn't Suck; https://rmusser.net/git/admin-2/Infosec_Reference for non-MS Git hosted version.

  • whereami

    Uses WiFi signals :signal_strength: and machine learning to predict where you are

  • openlibrary

    One webpage for every book ever published!

  • Project mention: Ask HN: Anyone looking for contributors for their open source projects | news.ycombinator.com | 2024-03-21

    I'd like to make a pitch for Openlibrary.org the free online library from Internet Archive that includes a fulltext search of millions of books.

    I've been volunteering with them on and off for several years and it's always a lovely experience. Their backend is python and frontend mostly from python templates and some Vue for librarian stuff.

    Every Tuesday they have a call on Zoom that everyone is welcome to join to share what they're working on, ask for help, and generally chat a bit. It's a great time.

    Depending on what you're interested in there's a lot to do from helping build import pipelines for more book entries, writing bots to cleanup data, Performance improvements, better documenting public APIs, etc

    I'm currently slowly working on a wikidata integration for their authors page. We also could use some help upgrading to Vue 3, mentors for Google summer of code would be helpful, find of ML projects needing help, moving away from old jQuery libraries, etc.

    They can be quite responsive to PRs too like I blogged about here: https://blog.rayberger.org/idea-to-merged-in-less-than-30-mi...

    For example, here's a small issue that could use some help on the python side: https://github.com/internetarchive/openlibrary/issues/8928

  • CompreFace

    Leading free and open-source face recognition system

  • Project mention: Double-Take not getting enough events/images from Frigate? | /r/frigate_nvr | 2023-08-01

    # https://github.com/exadel-inc/CompreFace/blob/master/docs/Face-services-and-plugins.md)

  • greenshot

    Greenshot for Windows - Report bugs & features go here: https://greenshot.atlassian.net or look for information on:

  • Project mention: Help removing ads on https://getgreenshot.org/ | /r/uBlockOrigin | 2023-12-10

    Just looking for filters to remove ad space on https://getgreenshot.org/. There is a space at the top on one on the right side. Thanks!

  • BoostNote-App

    Boost Note is a document driven project management tool that maximizes remote DevOps team velocity.

  • Project mention: Created a versus list for Note Taking Apps (last tab). What do you guys think? Did I miss anything? | /r/UpNote_App | 2023-07-04
  • tsoa

    Build OpenAPI-compliant REST APIs using TypeScript and Node

  • Project mention: Create Production-Ready SDKs with Goa | dev.to | 2023-11-22

    Tsoa is a popular TypeScript framework similar to Goa that you may encounter in the OpenAPI ecosystem. Speakeasy has a tutorial for it, too.

  • igel

    a delightful machine learning tool that allows you to train, test, and use models without writing code

  • BruteShark

    Network Analysis Tool

  • yagmail

    Send email in Python conveniently for gmail using yagmail

  • protoc-gen-doc

    Documentation generator plugin for Google Protocol Buffers

  • Project mention: Embedded communication protocols doc gen | /r/embedded | 2023-05-20
  • graphtage

    A semantic diff utility and library for tree-like files such as JSON, JSON5, XML, HTML, YAML, and CSV.

  • Project mention: Pijul: Version-Control Post-Git • Goto 2023 | news.ycombinator.com | 2023-08-11

    I'm not familiar with Pijul, and haven't finished watching this presentation, but IME the problems with modern version control tools is that they still rely on comparing lines of plain text, something we've been doing for decades. Merge conflicts are an issue because our tools are agnostic about the actual content they're tracking.

    Instead, the tools should be smarter and work on the level of functions, classes, packages, sentences, paragraphs, or whatever primitive makes sense for the project and file that is being changed. In the case of code bases, they need to be aware of the language and the AST of the program. For binary files, they need to be aware of the file format and its binary structure. This would allow them to show actually meaningful diffs, and minimize the chances of conflicts, and of producing a corrupt file after an automatic merge.

    There has been some research in this area, and there are a few semantic diffing tools[1,2,3], but I'm not aware of this being widely used in any VCS.

    Nowadays, with all the machine learning advances, the ideal VCS should also use ML to understand the change at a deeper level, and maybe even suggest improvements. If AI can write code for me, it could surely understand what I'm trying to do, and help me so that version control is entirely hands-free, instead of having to fight with it, and be constantly aware of it, as I have to do now.

    I just finished watching the presentation, and Pijul seems like an iterative improvement over Git. Nothing jumped out at me like a killer feature that would make me want to give it a try. It might be because the author focuses too much on technical details, instead of taking a step back and rethinking what a modern VCS tool should look like today.

    [1]: https://semanticdiff.com/

    [2]: https://github.com/trailofbits/graphtage

    [3]: https://github.com/GumTreeDiff/gumtree

  • cloud-game

    Web-based Cloud Gaming service for Retro Game

  • maskphish

    Introducing "URL Making Technology" to the world for the very FIRST TIME. Give a Mask to Phishing URL like a PRO.. A MUST have tool for Phishing.

  • SaaSHub

    SaaSHub - Software Alternatives and Reviews. SaaSHub helps you find the best software and product alternatives

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NOTE: The open source projects on this list are ordered by number of github stars. The number of mentions indicates repo mentiontions in the last 12 Months or since we started tracking (Dec 2020). The latest post mention was on 2024-04-07.

Hacktoberfest2021 related posts

Index

What are some of the best open-source Hacktoberfest2021 projects? This list will help you:

Project Stars
1 fastlane 38,595
2 cheat.sh 37,399
3 linkedin-skill-assessments-quizzes 28,069
4 transfer.sh 14,914
5 bootstrap-table 11,669
6 earthly 10,816
7 vue-material 9,869
8 resty 9,309
9 bit 6,003
10 Infosec_Reference 5,354
11 whereami 5,088
12 openlibrary 4,831
13 CompreFace 3,855
14 greenshot 3,771
15 BoostNote-App 3,633
16 tsoa 3,121
17 igel 3,080
18 BruteShark 2,908
19 yagmail 2,580
20 protoc-gen-doc 2,555
21 graphtage 2,316
22 cloud-game 2,206
23 maskphish 2,091
SaaSHub - Software Alternatives and Reviews
SaaSHub helps you find the best software and product alternatives
www.saashub.com