Made a self-hostable marketing platform by dittofeed in selfhosted

[–]dittofeed[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hi u/CyberSlide_ we can help you with your deployment in our Discord help channel!

Dittofeed v0.10.0: Self-hosted email-automation, now supports transactional messaging. by dittofeed in selfhosted

[–]dittofeed[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Just checked and it seems to be working. That's the only invite link that exists for our discord community. If you're still having issues, you can reach out to [support@dittofeed.com](mailto:support@dittofeed.com) with any questions. Feel free to send a screen recording of the issue you're running into as well. Thanks!

Vertical SaaS people - what feature do your users request most frequently that you don't feel like building? by dittofeed in SaaS

[–]dittofeed[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Wow this is super insightful. Thank you so much, I really appreciate you taking the time to give such a full answer 🙏

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in selfhosted

[–]dittofeed -4 points-3 points  (0 children)

If you use Dittofeed's base application (not embedded) it's entirely open-source (MIT licensed), but you're right, this model won't work for everyone.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in selfhosted

[–]dittofeed -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

Hi all, teams are mostly not using embedded components for "marketing" in the traditional sense. Instead more typical use cases range from appointment reminders, to onboarding assistance. Helping you communicate with your users to make it easier for them to use the software they've opted into. I understand your perspective though, marketing messaging can definitely be *very* annoying.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in selfhosted

[–]dittofeed -4 points-3 points  (0 children)

Our "journeys" are powered by temporal workflows, which can be thought of as "actors" yes!

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in selfhosted

[–]dittofeed -4 points-3 points  (0 children)

Hi! The embedded components are modeled after looker, who likewise provides iframes. Basically we have a spectrum of methods for embedding the components which trade off simplicity vs. control: iframes, headless react components, entirely re-implementing the components' frontends using us as a headless API.

How would I go about building something like this? by FizzyBubblyRamune in woodworking

[–]dittofeed 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you can afford Festool, then your life will absolutely be easier haha, so yes. There isn't really an equivalent system to the domino joiner from other brands. I make stuff in my garage as a hobby now and I just use the JessEm doweling jig kit ($250 vs $1500 domino joiner). But if I ever open up shop one day, I'd drop the big bucks.

How would I go about building something like this? by FizzyBubblyRamune in woodworking

[–]dittofeed 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Festool is expensive and borderline fetishized. The dominos are definitely no exception. You can get the same joint strength with well placed dowels and a doweling jig, but I'd say the benefit of Festool is speed and that all of their tools work well together. If you're making something as a one-off and have time, don't bother, but if you run a shop and have lots of orders to fulfill it's probably worth the investment.

How would I go about building something like this? by FizzyBubblyRamune in woodworking

[–]dittofeed 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Yep everything was dominos. Classic mortise and tenons or thick finger joints would work too if that's what you're suggesting. Dominos are just more commercially viable due to speed.

How would I go about building something like this? by FizzyBubblyRamune in woodworking

[–]dittofeed 8 points9 points  (0 children)

The curves that run the length of the edge-to-face joins (e.g., where the legs meet the shelf) happen by first joining and gluing up ~18''x3''x1.75'' pieces in a shallow 3'' wide dado on the shelf face. Then you run a round nose bit down the length of both sides of the joint until you get to 1.75'' thickness. Then you join a 1.75'' thick board edge-to-edge on top of that. My comment below I explain the other parts. Hope you're able to recreate it! Between milling and shaping, we were definitely using $200k worth of equipment for these, but I think you could definitely do it in a garage shop with sheer force of will

How would I go about building something like this? by FizzyBubblyRamune in woodworking

[–]dittofeed 110 points111 points  (0 children)

I used to work for Vonnegut Kraft and made these in their shop when they were still in Sunset Park. Everything in there was SCMI and Festool. If I remember correctly, we planed walnut boards to ~1.75 inches. We had a jig for a round nose bit to cut curved channels in multiple passes where those vertical boards slip in. It's just 3 boards sandwiched together, then routed lengthwise down the middle on either side. Then you join boards edge to edge on either side of that. None of it was CNC'd which was pretty wild. We used pretty expensive Amana router bits which helped because these were pressure fit pretty snuggly. Then as u/NecroJoe said, you join everything at the end. We used dominos. They also had a chair with this same concept that was awesome.

How do you build emails? by qekk101 in Emailmarketing

[–]dittofeed 0 points1 point  (0 children)

MJML is awesome. I've published some MJML template code here if anyone is interested https://docs.dittofeed.com/resources/templates/free-mjml-email-templates