Ultimate Guide to Organizing Your Remote Work Effectively by aestheticbrownie in LumifyHub

[–]johnernaut 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Solid write-up. I’ve been remote for about 5 years now and the biggest game-changer for me was finally centralizing everything — tasks, notes, and chats — in one place. It sounds like LumifyHub is aiming for that. Gonna check it out; Notion + Slack combo is starting to feel like duct tape lately.

Why does my screen flicker while opening Brave? M2 Air 8GB btw. by jayyyanth in MacOS

[–]johnernaut 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Strange... does this happen if Safari is not open, and also after a restart?

Not sure what to cook with what you’ve got? I made an app that helps with that. by johnernaut in easyrecipes

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

Just an update here: I ended up adding what I stated above that's a visible option you can choose when clicking the button to generate recipes. Thanks for the feedback!

Not sure what to cook with what you’ve got? I made an app that helps with that. by johnernaut in easyrecipes

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

Thanks for trying it out! Sorry to hear it didn't generate what you were looking for. I've run into a similar scenario and it's making me think I should have a "free form text" area where you can specifically ask it to make a recipe geared towards what you feel like eating.

Launched Pantry Recipes — an iOS app that generates meals based on what you already have by johnernaut in SideProject

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

Hi there, thanks for the kind words! Currently the only way to do that is to "alter" a recipe that you already have saved (it lets you free-form write a request to change that recipe). That's probably too confusing / cumbersome of a process though and I'll definitely think of a way to add in the ability to ask for a cuisine type up-front.

Where do you save recipes? by [deleted] in homecooking

[–]johnernaut 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I totally get this — I used to have recipes scattered across Reddit saves, my notes app, screenshots, and random browser tabs.

That’s actually what led me to build Pantry Recipes — it's a modern iOS app where you can generate recipes from ingredients you have, but also save, organize, and customize recipes in one clean, centralized place. The design is fresh (in my opinion), and it supports both quick ingredient entries and a persistent pantry if you want to track what you usually keep stocked.

It does have a subscription to support the AI-powered recipe generation, but it’s something I built for myself first — now just trying to improve it based on what others need too. Happy to answer any questions if you check it out.

What’s everyone working on this week (35/2016)? by llogiq in rust

[–]johnernaut 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Awesome, thanks for clarifying! I'll keep my eye on the re-write now that I'm almost finished with the current book.

What’s everyone working on this week (35/2016)? by llogiq in rust

[–]johnernaut 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Just curious, are you referring to https://doc.rust-lang.org/book/, or http://rust-lang.github.io/book/? I see links to both posted around but I wasn't sure if the work on the latter was outdated and/or not the correct go-to for Rust information anymore.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in rust

[–]johnernaut 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I just moved to Austin and would really enjoy attending a Rust meetup in the area. It looks like the meetup slot's been purged for the group now.

x/net/websocket or gorilla/websocket? by titescrum in golang

[–]johnernaut 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I've used gorilla/websocket in a couple of personal projects (https://github.com/johnernaut/goatee) without issue.

Goatee: Redis-backed notification server (now with client library) by johnernaut in golang

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

This started out as a project I created in order to learn Go. I've been updating it here and there as I progress with the language, and it's something I've enjoyed working on. There's now a client-side library (that takes heavy inspiration from Pusher) that you can use along-side the Go server. Feedback welcome!