I’ve been working on <a href="https://www.sanitycheck.io" rel="nofollow">https://www.sanitycheck.io</a> for the past 18 or so months. It started as a project to archive Google Search Console data - but now the most useful part to me is the SEO change testing aspect.<p>It’s a tool I use myself every day on my own sites - which is something I’ve found critical to keeping up progress on side projects.
I'm working on a few different side-projects. Two of my more current/active area are fine-woodworking for furniture construction and open source work within the linux audio realm. The latter mostly focuses on <a href="http://zynaddsubfx.sf.net/" rel="nofollow">http://zynaddsubfx.sf.net/</a>
I'm writing my own webserver in python, my only purpose to this is to learn python and to force myself to do TDD and to write more functional code instead of OO or procedural code with side effects.
I would like to have a fully working webserver with threads and serving full html pages.
I want to provide community funded VPN and VPS, eventually more services for those in need. Rather than do a startup or nonprofit I think it should take the form of a physical open to the public church resembling an internet cafe, but with development environments and such.
I've been working on
<a href="https://www.idiopage.com" rel="nofollow">https://www.idiopage.com</a> for a week, MVP should be finished in the next couple of days. Hoping this side project can make some money but I want to try and improve my sales and marketing skills in the process even if it flops.
I have been working on <a href="https://knowledgetrybe.com" rel="nofollow">https://knowledgetrybe.com</a> for the past few months. It's Hacker News for Science/Learning.<p>It's an MVP and I'm working on introducing comments.
I launched <a href="https://dndemail.com" rel="nofollow">https://dndemail.com</a> last year -- it adds do not disturb to your Gmail on all your devices. I built it for myself and released it because I found it so useful.