Linear raised the bar for issue tracking.
Obsidian raised the bar for personal knowledge.
Zed raised the bar for fast collaborative tools.
I’m building Nosdesk with that same obsession for helpdesk and project teams.
Fast, collaborative, self-hostable, Rust-powered.
https://t.co/0Fi9UMvMWm
@varien I’m glad to see artists working with generative technology in the same way a serum patch or a splice sample could get you closer to an idea you want to express musically. Super exciting stuff!
@tommoor A lot of bad decisions are made with good intentions. Being attached to the intentions that were lost in integration holds you to a higher standard than the implementation ever could.
I’m working on getting the hosted version online, but if you can’t wait for the free trial, have a go at spinning up the docker image!
https://t.co/3nEJStWSyA
Nosdesk is moving fast! Multiple patch releases this week (up to 1.0.10), closing security gaps, improved email reliability, and tenant isolation. From 1.0.0 stable to production-hardened in a few days. Anyone self hosting the open-source helpdesk that actually ships?
@ankkala Crawford's Shop Class as Soulcraft was a great read about this. When the craft is replaced by abstractions, you lose something real through the process. At least some of us are still trying to build things the workshop way!
if something needs to be done, and it isn't getting done by others, it's probably because it's not easy to do & not worth their time. find out why it's not easy, by doing it yourself, and then make it easy to do
@JustDeeevin 3 layers of glow with increasing blur radii to simulate exponential falloff, with the larger layers using more saturated colours so that the text appears vibrant and saturated despite being a very light shade
it simulates how bright light sources behave on cameras and to our eye