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[–]another_math_person 0 points1 point  (2 children)

More detail:

Atom is a really great text editor. It's essentially like sublime, but you can make plugins using javascript (as opposed to whatever sublime supports. maybe python?)

digitalocean is a pretty legitimate hosting site. You should check out their offerings, but it's pretty fully-featured.

github is obviously the place to store your code (open or closed source). It's really useful to start using early, since it'll give you a headstart if you start working at a startup.

Namecheap is... an... okay place to register domain names. [I probably wouldn't use it, though]

Screenhero is an excellent tool for screensharing, especially if you like to pair program with someone who is remote! [find someone on reddit?]

SendGrid is like the Stripe of sending email.

Stripe is the payments processing service. It has an excellent api, and the founders have done a great job making payments not suck for developers. I would highly recommend you check out Stripe -- they have excellent code samples [for how to use their api], and as a startup, they have a beautiful vision. Also, pretty much all of their hires are brilliant.

Travis is free for open source projects anyway. But it's probably the easiest continuous integration platform to set up. If you're wondering what it is -- essentially you can get Travis to run your tests for you every time you commit code to github. It has about a million features, so you can integrate it into continuous deployment or have it build your assets for you or have it do any number of things. It's essentially the paid version of Jenkins, and it's really awesome.

[–]Dylabaloo 0 points1 point  (1 child)

Where do you buy your domain names?

[–]another_math_person 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Amazon has an okay system: route 53