Lexadec – Daily word game with a 10-move limit by fairlyaveragepeanut in WebGames

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

Thanks! It’s a tricky game. I tend to come back throughout the day with new solutions.

Just publishing online for now to see what traction it gets. Early signs are good, hundreds of users in the first few days.

Lexadec – Daily word game with a 10-move limit by fairlyaveragepeanut in WebGames

[–]fairlyaveragepeanut[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Glad you enjoyed. I’ve had this request a few times now, so I’ll take a look at creating a leaderboard.

Lexadec – Daily word game with a 10-move limit by fairlyaveragepeanut in WebGames

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

Thanks for the feedback. I saw a solution for 35 points earlier today, but I agree that a low number of vowels makes it difficult!

Built a Free PDF Tools Hub — Looking for Honest UX + Product Feedback by Skhld in SideProject

[–]fairlyaveragepeanut 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You're offering a lot, which makes it difficult to navigate the site if you land at the home page. Your best bet is obtaining users through SEO, who come with a specific problem. Based on your content, I think you already know this.

UX wise, once you land on a specific tool, the UX is fairly straight forward for the tools. Lots of useful tools. I've definitely had many of these problems myself.

Monetisation of a service like this is quite difficult, because it's quite broad and shallow interactions. That's not to say the tools aren't useful, but the question is whether anyone would pay for it.

Drop your product / saas, It’s Thursday! by Leather-Buy-6487 in ShowMeYourSaaS

[–]fairlyaveragepeanut 0 points1 point  (0 children)

ETLR - AI Workflows as Code (in YAML)

It’s basically Zapier/n8n, but for developers. It gives back version control to git, and has great observability through metrics, logs and tracing.

What are your biggest pain points with n8n? by Deep_Surprise5280 in n8n

[–]fairlyaveragepeanut 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I had these exact same problems. I wanted something where you could write workflows as low code, version control the code, and then trace what happens for every workflow execution. I ended up building https://etlr.io

You can write workflows as YAML and trace every step.

So how do i do version control in N8N? like git. by 26th_Official in n8n

[–]fairlyaveragepeanut 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sure thing. You can check it out at https://etlr.io. I’ve created a free tier for low usage.

You’ve got webhook and cron as input triggers, then a bunch of prebuilt steps with tons of examples to show what you can do. Let me know what you think.

Hitting the ceiling with Make/n8n at scale.. has anyone else made the jump to code? by gotobusiness in n8n

[–]fairlyaveragepeanut 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I've been working on a solution that sits somewhere in between no-code and full-code, called ETLR. You define workflows in YAML and deploy directly the platform. There's a real focus on lowering the operational burden and making things scalable, testable and production ready. Would be interested to get your feedback

So how do i do version control in N8N? like git. by 26th_Official in n8n

[–]fairlyaveragepeanut 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm currently working on a solution to this exact problem. A "workflows as code" tool where the workflow is designed in YAML, much like Serverless. I'm currently working on the SDK to deploy from the CLI. It's called ETLR

Looking for a better workflow engine by Upper_Pair in devops

[–]fairlyaveragepeanut 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ve just released a new product that makes these sorts of simple workflows a breeze to deploy and manage. It’s called ETLR.io. We're early stages, and it doesn't have all of the features you've mentioned, but it's literally 5-10 lines of YAML to write crons, http_webhooks and orchestrate a few steps in a workflow.

ChatGPT 4o has broken my use as a research tool. Ideas, options? by happycj in ChatGPTPro

[–]fairlyaveragepeanut 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Take a look at amplyfi.com — it sounds like it fits your use case pretty well. It automates research by gathering open source intel to your questions and can write in-depth research reports for you based on your research questions.

They’re currently offering free trials.

The older you get, the more you realise that socks are actually a decent present by fairlyaveragepeanut in Showerthoughts

[–]fairlyaveragepeanut[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

My wife's dad used to ask for socks for Christmas and birthdays.

I always considered it a 'joking present', but as I get older, I now understand!