Meet KeyKeeper - because managing API keys shouldn't be a nightmare
KeyKeeper fixes this mess:
✅ Local storage - your keys stay on your machine, period
✅ Project organization - development, staging, production, all separated and tidy
✅ VSCode integration - import keys directly into your editor with one click
✅ Tags and scopes - because API keys deserve some order too
✅ Easy on the eyes UI - dark mode ftw
Perfect for us devs who spend our lives juggling 20 different projects and API keys that look like 2000s WiFi passwords.
I've never worked in tech but throughout my programming journey I've always struggled with: managing API keys properly.
Like, I'd throw them in .env files, then forget to update the .gitignore, or copy them into random files on my desktop that would just disappear into the void. And when I had to switch between different projects it was always a total mess - "wait, was this key for the previous project or the new one?"
Finally I said enough and built myself KeyKeeper. Nothing revolutionary, just a simple way to keep everything organized locally without having to rely on external services or password managers that cost a fortune.
If you're also tired of wasting time with this stuff, maybe it could be useful for you too!
Still in alpha but you can try from github
#dev #apikeys #productivity #tools
The funny thing about the Europe/US AC debate is that it is really grounded in ignorance on either side:
Europeans have no idea how scorching hot/humid/disgusting summers in most of the US are.
Americans living in hot/humid/disgusting summers assume everybody else does as well (and they visited Italy once and it was hot) and assumes that not having AC must be for crazy reasons like ideology.
In practice, most of Europe doesn't have AC for the same reason that nobody in SF had AC. You didn't use to need it.
It goes the other way: Everybody in Europe has per-room temperature control whereas in US households even having 2 climate zones is a luxury. Is that because of Ameripoor cannot afford many-zone climate control or because of ideology?
I just visited my parents in Germany and it was hot as fuck and so they went to BestBuy-equivalent and bought ACs.
We’ve agreed to a partnership with @SpaceX that will substantially increase our compute capacity.
This, along with our other recent compute deals, means that we’ve been able to increase our usage limits for Claude Code and the Claude API.
It’s hard to believe it’s already been 100 days since I received my Neuralink N1 implant. Looking back, the whole journey feels like science fiction that somehow became my everyday reality.
The surgery on Day 0 was surprisingly easy. A quick general anaesthetic, a small incision, and the robotic system did the rest — precisely placing the 1,024 ultra-thin threads into my motor cortex. I woke up alert and in good spirits and went home the next afternoon. By Day 3 I was feeling a lot better, and by Day 7 the little scar was already starting to fade. Recovery was genuinely minimal; I felt sharper and more positive than I had been in years after the BCI was turned on.
The real fun started in Week 2 when we paired the implant with my brand-new Apple MacBook (my very first Mac). The @neuralink engineers walked me through calibration sessions, and within a couple of minutes I was moving the cursor just by thinking. At first it felt like trying to remember a dream, but by Week 3 it was second nature. Scrolling, clicking, typing — all mind-controlled. The Mac integration was buttery smooth; I went from total Mac newbie to power-user faster than I ever expected.
By Day 80 I was ready for the big leagues. That’s when I fired up @Warcraft of Warcraft for the first time with pure thought control. The first raid felt clunky, but once my brain and the BCI synced, it was pure magic. I’m now raiding, and exploring Azeroth hands-free at full speed — no mouse, no keyboard, just intention. It’s honestly brilliant. The freedom is addictive.
The social-media side has been just as surprising. Every update I’ve shared has been met with genuine excitement rather than scepticism. Thousands of messages from people with disabilities, gamers, students, and scientists — all asking real questions about the tech and what it could mean for the future. The positivity has been overwhelming and incredibly motivating.
100 days in and I already can’t imagine life without it. The N1 didn’t just give me a new way to use a computer — it gave me a new way to live. Can’t wait to see what the next 100 days bring.
Thank you all so much for your support and I will keep you all updated as we continue this journey together.
Built a Polymarket TUI inspired by a Bloomberg Terminal. Integrated XMTP for social interactions. Runs on Polymarket APIs. Assistant powered by OpenRouter. Built with OpenTUI.
@SuhailKakar@xmtp_@Polymarket@anomalyco
lmk if you like it