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Anybody else compete in RailsRumble?

6 pointsby kapittiover 16 years ago
If so - link your apps - I'd love to see what other HN readers were able to pull off. Our team submitted the following site:<p>http://meetinbetween.us/<p>The wrap-up of the event can be found here: http://andrewkavanaugh.com/?p=12<p>If you competed, let's see your apps and hear your stories. If you didn't compete, don't forget to go vote on http://railsrumble.com

7 comments

markbaoover 16 years ago
I did.<p><a href="http://inspiresme.r08.railsrumble.com" rel="nofollow">http://inspiresme.r08.railsrumble.com</a><p>Solo developer, started 24 hours late. Was quite the experience though.<p>I'm thinking of organizing a distributed hacking weekend every few months that isn't with a competition or prizes or anything but it's more like a environment where there are a bunch of various hackers working on projects, with an IRC backchannel as the community.
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sheriffover 16 years ago
I worked with a few awesome folks in Providence, RI to produce <a href="http://twalala.com" rel="nofollow">http://twalala.com</a> - Twitter with a mute button.<p>All four of us are avid Twitter users, and had frequently run into situations where we wanted to put a muzzle on some of the folks we followed, without going so far as un-following them. Whether you want to block all tweets containing spoilers for your favorite TV show, or if you temporarily want to mute a drunk co-worker, twalala gives you that power. (We also added a whitelist, so things like mentions of your name can always get through.)<p>AFAIAC, the big wins were (a) working with a team of friends that I hadn't had the chance to collaborate with before, and (b) building something that we all wanted to exist... and now that it does exists, we all use it every day. Winning some contest prizes would be great, too, but we all agree that the experience was well worthwhile, regardless.
ben_hover 16 years ago
I was in a team of four, we built Twippet: <a href="http://railsrumble.twippet.com" rel="nofollow">http://railsrumble.twippet.com</a><p>It's code sharing over the twitter network. Throw up some code snippets, enter your twitter creds (pass not stored) to verify your twitter account and scrape your followings, and then you get a twitter-feed-esque list of searchable, taggable code snippets.
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laktekover 16 years ago
We also competeted, our app is <a href="http://myconfapp.com" rel="nofollow">http://myconfapp.com</a> - It's a social conference management platform.<p>Our experiences about the Rails Rumble is here : <a href="http://vesess.com/blog/2008/10/21/rocking-with-rails-rumble/" rel="nofollow">http://vesess.com/blog/2008/10/21/rocking-with-rails-rumble/</a>
bscofieldover 16 years ago
Solo here, on <a href="http://foreverhome.r08.railsrumble.com/" rel="nofollow">http://foreverhome.r08.railsrumble.com/</a><p>Several of my coworkers also competed - details here: <a href="http://www.viget.com/blog/viget-rumbles" rel="nofollow">http://www.viget.com/blog/viget-rumbles</a>
bigthboyover 16 years ago
I didn't compete in it but I was very impressed with what some of these people pumped out, and some of them looked like they didn't even really have any history on the scene and they still made impressive apps.
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Godinoover 16 years ago
There is a nice app - <a href="http://www.quotag.com" rel="nofollow">http://www.quotag.com</a> It has been an inspiration for some apps competing in rails rumble.