Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | msantos's commentslogin

For a long time I used to use smtp-sink — http://www.postfix.org/smtp-sink.1.html

    $ smtp-sink -u nobody -R /tmp/smtp-sink -d "maildir/%Y-%m-%d/mail.%H.%M." 127.0.0.1:25 1024
Until I joined a team that didn’t find cli as fun and preferred GUI tools. And that’s when I found mailcatcher. It’s solid and just works.


Gmail

A Soft murmur (mobile app)

Linux


> Offbrand POE+ switch firewalled at the router to avoid cloud, telemetry, and backdoor bullshit

How do you handle firmware updates for the devices connected to this vlan?


My 10+ years old poor-man's image background removal through ImageMagick alone

https://gist.github.com/mvsantos/5554663

It does a good enough job for studio photography with clear subjects and plain backgrounds. But fails miserably if the background is multicolour and/or contain too many objects.


Got some example images you have processed?


Someone asked that 6 years ago and they still waiting for a reply


thatsthejoke.gif


It’s not funny if you have to explain it - said someone once about a joke that had to be explained


The solution really depends on what sort of problems you are trying to solve and who your customers are.

There are a fair few low-code solutions out there for reporting and data visualisation that are great for finance and marketing teams for example. e.g. https://metabase.com/ , https://evidence.dev/

For multipurpose SMB workflows and organisational processes, I have used n8n in the recent past and found it was quite good and incredibly easy to maintain. https://n8n.io/engineering-resources/

For enterprise processes I'd go with Camunda (solely based on recommendations and not first hand experience). Although only parts of their platform are OSS https://github.com/camunda

Bear in mind that some of these are not suitable if you want to build something that competes with them while taking their OSS code. But are perfectly fine otherwise.


Awesome, will try these out. Thanks.


If I was to pick one single topic that improved my overall experience with Jira the most, I would say mastering JQL.

With JQL you can add custom filters to boards and backlogs making it considerably easier to hone in and highlight and narrow down specific patterns.

You can also save/fav searches and filters based on complex JQL scenarios if you use a shared backlog and rely on custom labels to split work.

Here are some JQL ideas https://gist.github.com/mvsantos/e9b2530a97a6345c2668116ffef...

As for Jira general slowness, bug your instance's admin to run maintenance cleanups and purges more often particularly if you run a large shared instance. It won't solve the problem entirely, but might help depending on your instance size and typical usage.

Having clear baseline practices will help too, but don't go overboard and come up with dozens of rules. Keep it intuitive so that they quickly become second-nature, and not points of contention and friction.


Thanks, I'll look into JQL some more. I had gotten frustrated before trying to figure out the syntax and available values. I think our instance is overflowing with options and different projects that use different ticket properties that it makes it hard to see what types of properties can be filtered on.


HNLondon run until at least 2018[1] and were well organised IMO. The speakers line up were mostly very interesting. And some of the recordings of the talks are still available at https://vimeo.com/hnlondon

If I'm not mistaken the organisers of HNLondon in its final years were Dmitri Grabov[2] and Stevie Buckley[3].

One recurring issue that I recall was the typical audience member trying to hijack Q&A to promote stuff - i.e. "can I ask a question?" then proceeds to make a comment and pitch their product instead. But that's not isolated to HNLondon.

PS: Big shoutout to Dmitri and Stevie for the awesome events that they put together back in the day.

[1] https://twitter.com/HNLondon/with_replies

[2] https://twitter.com/dmitrigrabov

[3] https://twitter.com/StevieBuckley


Thanks for this, I’ve reached out to both Dmitri and Stevie to chat about the community. They definitely paved the way for this, so their knowledge would be invaluable.


In most of the events only sponsor are allow to do spam or say they are recruiting. Normal attendes are not allow to do that and they will be ban for the next events.


I remember going to one of these, many years ago. Sounded cool, hackers meeting up. I was pretty adept at reverse engineering and was just getting into vulnerability research, so I figured it would be right up my street.

Unfortunately it ended up being a talk about making websites with some framework or other, and some uninspirational speech about some startup. I didn't bother going to another one.

Though from this I did find out about the HN website itself, which is worth a browse now and then. So I suppose it was worth going anyway.


+1 for OpenProject.

For small (sub 20 users) their hosted plan comes up to approx EUR1400 (total) per year. And IMO that's definitely worth paying for, instead of going down the self-hosting path once you considered the costs of self-hosting it i.e. (maintainer's hourly rate * 2 * 12) + hardware hosting costs.

https://www.openproject.org/intro/


If the resulting data doesn't need formatting, try https://www.postman.com/ It's easy enough to write a few collections and train non-techies to use it.

If you are after richly formatted data then try Metabase https://www.metabase.com/


Twitter thread by one of the authors https://twitter.com/pankaj/status/1384019781909585921

PS: the title had to be edited because it exceeded HN's max char count by 2


Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: