Working on an open source, fast, fuzzy search engine that's dead simple to set-up and run: <a href="https://github.com/typesense/typesense" rel="nofollow">https://github.com/typesense/typesense</a><p>People who want a good search engine (for instant search etc.) today either need to go for a cloud hosted proprietary offering or have to learn to set-up Elasticsearch and spend a lot of time tweaking it to support typo tolerance. Trying to change that status quo.
We want to build Zenkit as an Allrounder for your private life and your Business. At the moment it´s a tool which combines project management, task management, collaboration and many more. You can organize almost every department of your business with Zenkit. The best thing, you can switch views, personalize and customize it just the way you need it. If you need just a simple to-do list, no problem. You need to build a database and connect it to different tables, you can do that too.
Every business uses a lot of different tools which don´t "talk" to each other. Different departments are separated by different tools and data silos, not up-to-date files and a bad project overview are the problems. With Zenkit we want to build a connection between every team and department.<p>There is so much more to say about it. So if you are interested you could visit our website here: <a href="https://zenkit.com" rel="nofollow">https://zenkit.com</a>
We're building a hosted SaaS and open source enterprise version of Apache Airflow [1] at Astronomer [2].<p>The goal of our startup is to solve all of the pain points where the framework stops and make the best version of operationalizing Airflow on Kubernetes; and authoring, deploying, and running DAGs in a distributed execution environment in production at scale.<p>It's pretty interesting to learn and see how features like orchestration and dynamic provisioning on a platform actually work all the way down.<p>[1]: <a href="https://github.com/apache/incubator-airflow/" rel="nofollow">https://github.com/apache/incubator-airflow/</a><p>[2]: <a href="https://www.astronomer.io/" rel="nofollow">https://www.astronomer.io/</a>
I work for a company that develops and maintains an online platform used by quite a few large (academic) publishers.<p>I'm working on the search side of things, integrating the rest of the platform with the text search service we're using. Some (or a lot!) of it is busywork, but sometimes things get interesting. Mostly when you're out of options with what functionality is offered out of the box and you have to essentially look under the hood at the internals and write your own custom thing to serve whatever weird requirement client X came up with.<p>Apologies for the vagueness!
I work at a statup: <a href="https://www.pricekart.com" rel="nofollow">https://www.pricekart.com</a> as Asst. Product Manger, Data Scientist and Digital Marketer. Yes you read it right, in startups you have to perform multiple roles. I also write blogs and article for my startup. It is so much fun to work in a startup as you get a wide exposure in multiple fields. I have learned a lot and our startup is growing really fast.
Working on migrating firebase real time database to firestore for <a href="https://aprl.la/" rel="nofollow">https://aprl.la/</a><p>Its a peer to peer mobile app for mens to share clothes. Feedbacks welcome. (think of it like Airbnb for Men's fashion)
I am trying to build a portfolio of small services at <a href="http://staticgarden.com" rel="nofollow">http://staticgarden.com</a> and then charging people for the whole bundle of services. Services like form endpoints, json store etc, mostly targeted at the JAMStack.
This looks like a provocative question, but ok. We're working on a Q&A knowledge base deeply integrated with slack: <a href="https://www.producthunt.com/upcoming/all-new-onebar" rel="nofollow">https://www.producthunt.com/upcoming/all-new-onebar</a>
Async event pipeline written in Rust running on endpoint machines for telemetry collection. Also working on rewriting some web components from Ruby to Rust for performance (and cost) improvements.<p>It’s been a fun few months and I am super pleased to have chose Rust for this task.